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UK Against Fluoridation

Tuesday, August 13, 2019

newly formed Community Water Fluoridation

Unanimous, nobody brave enough to risk their career by voting and speaking against. 

LDCs applaud community water fluoridation

    The national conference of Local Dental Committees (LDCs), which represents more than 25,000 NHS dentists working in high street practices, is supporting community water fluoridation in areas of need. A motion applauding those local authorities taking forward water fluoridation was approved unanimously at a conference on 7 June.
    The vote is an important milestone for the newly formed Community Water Fluoridation network. The network's role is to make sure that public consultations are informed by scientific evidence and accurate representation of the needs of families in their locality.
    LDC members have provided the impetus for the network which is supported by a wide range of dental, medical, child and health-related organisations. Among them are NHS England, the British Fluoridation Society, the British Dental Association, the British Society of Paediatric Dentistry and the Association of Dental Groups.
    Simon Hearnshaw, a dentist who works for Health Education England, and who put forward the motion, said: 'To have this kind of unanimous response from dentists highlights just how strongly we all support fluoridation of water and want to see the oral health of our young patients improve'.
    Water fluoridation is approved by parliament but since 2012, local authorities which want to implement the public health measure must first carry out a public consultation.
    The network is at the ready to put forward dental and medical spokespeople from local communities who will answer questions and describe the dental challenges they are dealing with almost daily and the difference water fluoridation could make. They will be ready to attend events and meetings over the course of the consultations so that there is consistent dental representation.
    Areas where water is not fluoridated have a disproportionately higher number of children with dental decay.

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