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    Home ยป Learn About Paleo & Keto Diets

    Fluoridated Water: What You should Know

    Last Modified: Feb 16, 2023 by Paleo Leaper ยท This post may contain affiliate links ยท Leave a Comment

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    Thereโ€™s a big problem with talking about fluoride, and itโ€™s the same problem with talking about GMOs and vaccines: once they make up their mind on the topic, most people refuse to even consider any argument that doesnโ€™t align with whatever they already believe. If theyโ€™re presented with facts to the contrary, they explain them as bad science or even a conspiracy, or just outright ignore them and try to pretend they donโ€™t exist.

    If you already have a strong opinion on fluoride, nobody can make you change your mind. But if youโ€™re open to considering the question, hereโ€™s a look at the fluoride controversy from someone with absolutely no financial or political stake in either side, just an interest in avoiding cavities and preventing tooth decay.

    The History of Fluoride

    This article describes the whole history of water fluoridation. In 1901, a Colorado dentist named Dr. McKay described several patients with stained teeth, and proposed that the staining might be caused by something in the water supply. But he also noticed something else: wherever people had the stains on their teeth, they didnโ€™t have cavities.

    Other dentists also started noticing similar stains. In 1925, a study confirmed Dr. McKayโ€™s original observation: children who had stained teeth typically had unusually low rates of tooth decay.

    In the 1930s, a chemist named H. V. Churchill found that all the areas with a lot of tooth staining had extremely elevated levels of fluoride in the water supply. Other dentists confirmed that the fluoride caused both the tooth staining and the cavity protection. And they discovered something even more useful. For the cities with a lot of tooth staining, levels of fluoride in the water ranged from around 5 parts per million to almost 14 parts per million. But at a lower dose of about 1 part per million, you could get the benefits of preventing cavities, without the tooth staining.

    Fluoride in Water

    water

    Research on fluoride kept going through the 1930s. In 1945, water fluoridation was introduced at the city level for the first time, in Grand Rapids, Michigan. As a control group for comparison, researchers used the nearby city of Muskegon. By 1951, children in Grand Rapids had half as many cavities as children in the neighboring city of Muskegon, where the water wasnโ€™t fluoridated.

    Other cities started fluoridating their water in the late 1940s. Today most people living in the US drink fluoridated water. Literally thousands of studies since then have found that fluoride prevents cavities, especially in children. It would take way too long to link everything, so hereโ€™s a page with links to several different reviews; each of the reviews analyzes a bunch of different individual studies.

    Almost all industrialized countries distribute fluoride to their population somehow. Instead of fluoridated water, some countries also use fluoridated salt. The argument that โ€œEurope doesnโ€™t use fluoridated waterโ€ is very silly because most parts of Europe just use fluoridated salt instead. Fluoridated salt in Europe has reduced cavities just like fluoridated water in the US has reduced cavities, because thatโ€™s what fluoride does.

    Fluoride in Toothpaste

    Since the 1970s, most toothpastes have also included fluoride. But fluoride in toothpaste doesnโ€™t replace fluoride in the water. In 2010, well into the fluoride-toothpaste era, fluoridated water still reduced cavities in children. This was also true in Nevada in 2010 and in Alaska in 2011.

    Before going into the evidence for benefits and harms, time for a quick reality check:

    • Fluoride is a naturally-occurring substance. Itโ€™s been in the water for years. The difference is that now we standardize the amount of fluoride in the water instead of having huge regional variations.
    • The US is not the only country that distributes fluoride to citizens. They do it in Europe, too.
    • Fluoridated toothpaste is not a replacement for fluoridated water.

    How Fluoride Works

    So how does it work? Fluoride basically protects your teeth from sugar. Everyone naturally has bacteria on their teeth that feed on sugar. When they feed on sugar, those bacteria produce acid. The acid erodes the enamel on the surface of the teeth. Fluoride prevents cavities by helping to replace enamel that was eroded.

    Fluoride is especially important for children, who are particularly prone to getting cavities.

    Is Fluoride Dangerous?

    Itโ€™s one thing to say that fluoride naturally occurs in the water. But plenty of things are natural and also dangerous. Spider venom is natural, and you wouldnโ€™t want that in the water supply. So whatโ€™s the evidence that fluoride causes health problems?

    It Depends on the Level of Fluoride

    Public health officials recommend a fluoride concentration in water of 0.8-1.2 parts per million (ppm), particularly the lower end of that range. This is around the 1ppm "magic number" discovered in the 1930s. Many, many studies have shown that concentrations of 1.5ppm and above cause health problems, which is why the public water supply uses lower concentrations. Studies proving that 1.5+ ppm of fluoride causes harm are not relevant to fluoridated water.

    These studies simply arenโ€™t relevant to your drinking water, because the concentration of fluoride is way too high. Nobody is arguing that ultra-high levels of fluoride are beneficial or even harmless. Thatโ€™s a strawman. With that in mind, take a look at some research.

    Fluoride and IQ

    Fluoride only affects IQ at doses higher than anything found in tap water. Hereโ€™s a review. The vast majority of these studies were done in China, India, Iran, or Mexico, and the risks were from extremely high levels of fluoride, much higher than the levels youโ€™ll find in tap water. The real danger in the US is from private wells โ€“ namely, the water where the government doesnโ€™t control fluoride. If you look at kids drinking fluoridated vs. unfluoridated tap water, thereโ€™s no difference in IQ.

    Dental and Skeletal Health

    Dental fluorosis is the only side effect of fluoridation with any plausible support in the actual medical literature. Most people do get slightly whiter teeth from drinking fluoridated water. This doesnโ€™t hurt, and it doesnโ€™t affect the structure of the tooth or anything else.

    In extreme cases, some people get brownish discoloration from fluoride, but this only happens at much higher levels of fluoride than anything recommended for city water supplies.

    Dental fluorosis is not the same thing as skeletal fluorosis. Skeletal fluorosis is serious damage to bone health and strength caused by fluoride. But it requires about 10 times the level of fluoride that youโ€™d get from fluoridated water. All studies (like this one) showing serious skeletal problems from consuming fluoride looked at people consuming much more fluoride than youโ€™d get from fluoridated water in the US.

    Other Problems

    Fluoride gets blamed for so many other problems that it would take a book to debunk them all. Big systematic reviews havenโ€™t found credible evidence connecting fluoridated water to anything serious. Hereโ€™s one from the UK. Comparing fluoridated and non-fluoridated areas, the study found no change in hip fractures, kidney stones, all-cause death, Downโ€™s syndrome, bladder cancer, bone cancer, or all cancers in general. A CDC report from 2013 found no evidence for any non-dental side effects (the only dental side effect was harmless dental fluorosis; see above)

    That National Research Council Report

    This report from the National Research Council is often cited by anti-fluoridation activists. The report found that extremely high fluoride consumption caused health problems, including damage to bones and teeth. But again the level of fluoride that caused problems was much higher than the level of fluoride used in tap water. If you actually bother to read the report (apparently most anti-fluoridation blogs didnโ€™t), youโ€™ll see that a lot of the dangerous effects are from unfiltered well water โ€“ water that wasnโ€™t put through municipal fluoridation programs.

    Summing it Up

    Fluoridated Water

    Maybe, in a perfect world, if everyone avoided sugar and got sufficient amounts of every nutrient and had perfect dental hygiene otherwise, we wouldnโ€™t need fluoridated water. But how likely do you think that is to happen in the immediate future?

    And before you argue that people who donโ€™t take care of their teeth deserve the consequences โ€“ the biggest beneficiaries of fluoride are children. Lots of kids are born to parents who (for one reason or another) feed them a lot of sugar. Thatโ€™s not under the kidsโ€™ control. Without fluoride, those kids would get a lot more cavities. Do they โ€œdeserveโ€ that? Really?

    Fluoride was already in the water. Municipal fluoridation programs just adjust levels of fluoride to prevent cavities and avoid dangerously high levels of fluoride. Itโ€™s true that very high levels of fluoride are dangerous โ€“ and thatโ€™s exactly why itโ€™s good to regulate levels of fluoride in tap water. The real risk of fluoride poisoning in the US is from well water, not fluoridated municipal water. And contrary to popular belief, Europe does use fluoridation; they just put fluoride in the salt instead of the water.

    Fluoridated tap water is a safe, reasonably effective way to reduce cavities. It's not dental magic, but there's just no credible evidence that it was a Communist conspiracy, or a government plot to make people docile, or that it causes any serious side effects.

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