Study raises questions about fluoride and children’s IQ
A
study of young children in Canada suggests those whose mothers drank
fluoridated tap water while pregnant had slightly lower IQ scores than
children whose mothers lived in non-fluoridated cities. But don’t dash
for the nearest bottled water yet. Health experts at the American
Academy of Pediatrics and the American Dental Association cautioned that
public policy and drinking water consumption should not change on the
basis of this study.
“I still stand by the
weight of the best available evidence, from 70 years of study, that
community water fluoridation is safe and effective,” said Brittany
Seymour, a dentist and spokeswoman for the American Dental Association. “If
we’re able to replicate findings and continue to see outcomes, that
would compel us to revisit our recommendation. We’re just not there
yet.”
The American Academy of Pediatrics, likewise, recommends fluoride
in toothpastes and tooth varnishes for children because the mineral
prevents tooth decay. In drinking water, “fluoridation has been
incredibly protective,” said Aparna Bole,
a pediatrician who chairs the Council on Environmental Health at the
American Academy of Pediatrics. Fluoridation reduces the prevalence of
cavities by about one-fourth, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The CDC considers water fluoridation one of the 10 top health achievements of the past century, on par with vaccines and antismoking campaigns.
Bole
called the new study, published Monday in JAMA Pediatrics, “an
important addition to our body of knowledge. It supports the public
health community’s ongoing reevaluation of optimal fluoridation levels
in drinking water.”
In January 1945, researchers added fluoride to municipal water in Grand Rapids, Mich., the first program
to enlist fluoride to protect a city’s teeth. Opponents of fluoridation
have since raised concerns both ludicrous — fluoridation is not a communist plot — and legitimate, such as fluorosis.
In the mild form of fluorosis, faint white streaks appear on the teeth
of young children. Severe fluorosis, which is much rarer, damages bones.
Dozens
of cities in the United States and Canada, such as Portland, Ore., and
Vancouver, do not add fluoride to city water. Elsewhere in the United
States, fluoridation is the norm. As of 2014, per CDC data, two-thirds of people in the United States
had fluoride in their drinking water. In 2015, to reduce the risk of
mild fluorosis, the Department of Health and Human Services cut its
fluoride recommendations almost in half, from 1.2 milligrams per liter to 0.7 milligrams per liter.
Few
older studies addressed potential risks, or the lack thereof,
associated with fluoride exposure during pregnancy, said study author Christine Till,
a neuropsychologist at Toronto’s York University. She added that
“whether we found an effect or not, the data would be really relevant
because we would then address that gap in our knowledge.”
Till and her colleagues acquired data and frozen urine samples previously collected by Maternal-Infant Research on Environmental Chemicals,
or MIREC. That project, run by Canada’s public health department,
studied thousands of mothers who gave birth between 2008 and 2012. MIREC
researchers measured the toddlers’ IQ after the children turned 3.
Pregnant women reported their consumption of tap water and black tea, which is high in fluoride,
in questionnaires. The authors of the new study also calculated the
amount of fluoride in municipal water, based on the levels at wastewater
treatment plants linked to the women’s postal codes. The researchers
estimated the women’s fluoride intake based on a combination of those
measures.
The
researchers compared the fluoride intake of 400 women, some who lived
in fluoridated cities and some who did not. They controlled for factors
such as household income and the women’s education. A 1 milligram daily
increase in fluoride intake was associated with a 3.7-point drop in
children’s IQ, they found.
As an additional
step, Till and her colleagues measured fluoride biomarkers in urine from
500 pregnant women, collected during each trimester. Fluoride content
in urine was only moderately related to the estimates of the mothers’
fluoride intake, suggesting that neither was a perfect measure of how
much fluoride a pregnant woman drank.
The
scientists observed that a 1 milligram-per-liter increase in urine
fluoride predicted a drop in IQ of 4.5 points in young boys. When the
researchers examined the urine of mothers who had daughters, however,
fluoride had no association with IQ.
Previous
observational studies claimed to find relationships between fluoride
and IQ, but most were “of poorer quality due to various weaknesses in
study design,” said David Bellinger,
an expert in neuroepidemiology at Boston Children’s Hospital who was
not associated with this study. The methods in this report, he said, are
“very similar” to studies that showed low-dose lead and pesticide
toxicities.
But Bellinger called for further research. “Generally, no single epidemiological study settles a question like this,” he said.
“The decision to publish this article was not an easy one,” said Dimitri A. Christakis,
the editor of JAMA Pediatrics and a pediatrician at Seattle Children’s
Hospital. Christakis appended a note to the study, a first in his
career, explaining that the journal subjected the paper to “additional
scrutiny.” This included multiple statistical reviews, he said.
“The
findings are what they are,” Christakis said. “There is clearly an
association. It by no means proves definitively that this is a risk.”
Several
researchers unaffiliated with the report applauded this work’s
publication in the face of intense review. “I believe that, in general,
the dental community will discount these findings, minimize their
importance and continue to recommend the use of fluoridated water during
pregnancy,” said Pamela Den Besten,
a pediatric dentist who studies tooth enamel at the University of
California at San Francisco. She added: “This study has been carefully
conducted and analyzed.”
“This is an excellent study,” said Philippe Grandjean, a physician who studies brain development and environmental pollutants at the Harvard School of Public Health. “CDC
has to come out and look at the risk-benefit ratio again, because they
can’t continue relying on studies that were carried out decades ago.”
The
CDC declined to comment on the study itself because it was not a
participant, said Amesheia Buckner, an agency spokeswoman. “Community
water fluoridation is one of the most practical, cost-effective,
equitable and safe measures communities can take to prevent tooth
decay,” Buckner said.
The study has flaws, said John Ioannidis, a Stanford University meta-scientist and the author of an influential 2005 paper, “Why Most Published Research Findings Are False."
“It
has major drawbacks in terms of how the measurements have been made,”
Ioannidis said. “The results are very borderline in terms of statistical
significance.” It’s a weakness, he said, that the self-reported
consumption was not linked directly to levels of fluoride measured in
bodily fluids.
What’s more, the sex difference
in IQ — the drop observed for boys but not girls — “makes no sense,” he
said. “If you see a gender difference claim for this type of
association, it’s far more likely to be a spurious finding rather than
something true.”
Bole agreed. “I just don’t know how to interpret that,” she said.
Some physicians offered advice based on this study. “The
answer for me, I can say, is I would not have my wife drink fluoridated
water” if she were pregnant, Christakis said. Grandjean, likewise,
suggested pregnant women drink bottled water and limit black tea to a
single cup per day.
Others did not. “I’m
hoping people don’t conclude on the basis of this one study, ‘Oh, boy,
we should all be drinking bottled water.’ No,” Bole said. “Tap water in
most communities is the healthiest and most environmentally responsible
choice.” And adding more restrictions to what pregnant women can
consume, Ioannidis said, creates a “burden of feasibility."
Seymour
said the damage from dental disease goes beyond teeth. “Kids in the
U.S. who don’t have access to community water fluoridation have
significantly higher dental disease, and we know that impacts their
ability to learn and grow,” she said, including harm to sleep,
self-esteem and school performance. Seymour, whose young daughter drinks
city water, would “honestly be more concerned if there was a decision
to stop fluoridating our water,” she said.
Ioannidis’s
stance "on whether fluoride exposure during pregnancy is a bad thing
for the IQ of the child goes up about threefold,” he said. “If you
thought that it was maybe 1 percent likely to be true, that 1 percent
now would become 3 percent. It would still not be true.”
Read more:
Fluoride is a poison. Fluoride was poison yesterday. Fluoride is poison today. Fluoride will be poison tomorrow. Dr. Dean Burk who worked along side Dr. Otto Warburg 2 time Noble Prize winner in medicine has this to say about the poison fluoride: Poison
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