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NRC Delivers Wake Up Call on Fluoride
DIRECTORY: Health
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Fluoride Standards > NRC Review
> FAN Press Release
Fluoride Action Network
March 22, 2006
PRESS RELEASE
(For Immediate Release)
NRC Delivers Wake Up Call on Fluoride:
Current allowable levels linked to bone fractures, tooth damage,
and other toxic effects
WASHINGTON D.C. - A National Research Council
(NRC) report on fluoride toxicity released today gives powerful
evidence that many Americans are being over-dosed with harmful levels
of fluoride. A wide range of health problems are cited in the report,
with bones and teeth being the foremost, but not sole, targets of
concern.
The current “maximum
contaminant level” for fluoride, 4 parts per million (ppm),
was set by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to protect
adults from crippling skeletal fluorosis, a severe arthritic bone
disease. The NRC advises EPA to lower this standard because of strong
evidence linking fluoride to bone fracture, joint pain, and damage
to teeth.
The NRC also notes a growing body of
scientific research linking fluoride exposure to disruption of the
nervous and endocrine systems, including
the brain, thyroid and pineal gland. According to data presented
in the report, the doses of fluoride associated with thyroid disturbances
are now exceeded by many Americans – particularly children
- living in so-called “low fluoride” (1 ppm) areas.
“The crucial message of this report is that the highest scientific
authority in the US has determined that low levels of fluoride in
drinking water may have serious adverse health effects,” says
Dr. Paul Connett, professor of chemistry at St Lawrence University
and Executive Director of the Fluoride Action Network.
According to Dr. William Hirzy, a chemist at American University
and vice president of EPA’s Professionals Union in Washington
D.C., “the difference between the levels of fluoride causing
toxic effects and the levels added to water to prevent tooth decay
is vanishingly small and deeply troubling.”
Fluoride is found in processed food, beverages, dental products,
pesticide residues and polluted air. “The end result is that
some people drinking water with just 1
ppm fluoride may ingest enough fluoride from all sources to
experience a health problem,” says Hirzy.
Because of concerns over fluoride’s health risks, the NRC
report calls on government agencies to introduce nationwide monitoring
of fluoride levels in people’s urine and blood. The report
also recommends research to clarify
the relationship between fluoride and many chronic diseases including
cancer, arthritis, dementia, diabetes, and thyroid disease.
“The NRC’s report should change the fluoride debate
for many years to come,” notes Connett. “It shows that
the best, and most recent, medical evidence provides reason for
profound concern about current fluoride exposures.”
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The Fluoride Action Network (FAN) is the leading science and advocacy
group focused on health issues surrounding fluoride from water,
food, air, pesticides, and industrial exposures. FAN’s director
was an invited presenter at the initial meeting of the NRC panel
and FAN researchers submitted extensive scientific information throughout
the panel’s proceedings.
Contact: Paul Connett PhD, 802-355-0999, info@fluoridealert.org
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