
Augusta,
Maine
August 23, 2001
Maine
Governor Angus King today signed the most advanced bill
in the United states requiring dentists to inform their
patients that amalgam dental fillings contain a large
percentage of the toxic element mercury, which can be
harmful to the wearer's health.
In
his preliminary remarks before signing the bill, Gov.
King noted that Maine has probably taken more action to
get mercury out of the air and water than any other
state in the union. "And yet we all carry it around
in our mouths," he remarked.
Senate
President Michael Michaud spearheaded the bill and
Representatives Joanne Twoomey and Steven Stanley, all
of whom were present, spoke at the signing. Consumer
advocates Pam Anderson and Dr. Tom Anderson, a
mercury-free dentist from Houlton, ME, who led
grassroots support for the bill, participated in the
ceremony as well.
Senate
President Michaud cited the courage of the many
individuals who testified on behalf of the bill,
especially the dentists who came forward to endorse it
despite the opposition of the American Dental
Association. "We hope that the U.S. will take
Maine's lead and move forward with legislation at the
national level," he said.
The
bill mandates that every dentist's office will feature a
poster and a brochure informing patients about the
presence of mercury in amalgam fillings and about its
negative health effects.
Scientific
research has shown that dental amalgam is the chief
source of mercury in the human body. For that reason
Rep. Twoomey described the bill as a major step forward
for women of childbearing age and for children, who
receive their first exposure to mercury in the womb and
from their mother's breast milk. Mercury has been
implicated in neurological disorders of children such as
autism and ADD/ADHD, and in fertility problems in women.
"We
are delighted that this bill has been signed," said
Rep. Stanley. It is a major step forward to protect the
health of Maine citizens."
Pam
Anderson added that the group hopes Maine's next step
would be to ban the use of dental amalgam in all women
of childbearing age and in children.
Other
participants in the press conference were Kathleen
McGee, Director of the Maine Toxic Action Coalition;
Maine DAMS (Dental Amalgam Mercury Syndrome) Coordinator
Marjorie Monteleon, and New Hampshire DAMS Coordinator
Rosie Cronin; representatives from the Maine People's
Alliance, the Maine Citizens for Affordable Health Care,
and the Maine Department of Environmental Protection;
Dr. Gerald Vermette, mercury-free dentist;
Rosemary Fecteau, Ph.D., whose husband died of mercury
toxicity from his dental fillings; Charles Brown,
attorney for the national organization Consumers for
Dental Choice; and New York City DAMS Coordinator Dr.
Lydia Bronte, author of a widely respected book, THE
MERCURY IN YOUR MOUTH: The Truth About
"Silver" Dental Fillings.
"The
public is being deceived by the terminology used for
these fillings," said Charles Brown in his remarks.
"The ADA calls them "silver" fillings,
but they are really MERCURY fillings. If people knew the
principal ingredient is mercury they would not want
these fillings in their teeth."
Gov.
King compared the current use of mercury in dental
fillings with the 1950's use in shoe stores of powerful
x-ray machines called fluoroscopes, which exposed
hundreds of thousands of adults and children to high
doses of toxic x-rays. "Every child who went into
the shoe store to buy new shoes would put his feet into
the fluoroscope so the bones could be seen," King
recalled. "People who worked in the store were
exposed to the radiation all day; children played games
around the machine. Now we realize it was a terrible
thing to do, but then it seemed perfectly normal. Some
day we will wonder how we could ever have put such a
toxic substance into the human mouth."