Concerns have been raised about fluoride’s lack of safety and efficacy.

Sources of human exposure to the chemical fluoride have drastically increased since community water fluoridation began in the U.S. in the 1940’s. In addition to water, these sources now include food, air, soil, pesticides, fertilizers, dental products used at home and in the dental office, pharmaceutical drugs, cookware (non-stick Teflon), clothing, carpeting, and an array of other consumer items used on a regular basis. Click here to see a detailed list of sources of fluoride exposure.

Exposure to fluoride is suspected of impacting every part of the human body. Susceptible subpopulations, such as infants, children, and individuals with diabetes or renal problems, are known to be more severely impacted by intake of fluoride.

A lack of efficacy, lack of evidence, and lack of ethics are apparent in the current status quo of fluoride usage. These circumstances clearly demonstrate that there is an alarming lack of safety for the numerous applications of the chemical fluoride in commonly used products.

Signs of the Lack of Safety for this Chemical

Fluoride’s lack of safety make it a danger sign to human health

First, it should also be noted that fluoride is not an essential component for human growth and development. Second, fluoride has been recognized as one of 12 industrial chemicals known to cause developmental neurotoxicity in human beings. Third, some researchers have questioned the safety of fluoride.

Additionally, this chemical’s effectiveness in preventing tooth decay when it is ingested (such as through a water source) has been challenged. In fact, reports show that as industrialized countries were developing, decay rates in the general population rose to a peak of four to eight decayed, missing, or filled teeth (in the 1960’s). Then, reports show a dramatic decrease (down to today’s levels), regardless of fluoride use.

Controversy has also arisen over industrial ties to the chemical fluoride. Safety advocates for fluoride exposures have questioned if such industrial ties are ethical and if the industrial connections to these chemicals might result in a cover-up of the health effects caused by fluoride exposures.

Conclusion on Fluoride’s Lack of Safety: A Dangerous Chemical

Based on fluoride’s lack of safety for this chemical, informed consumer consent is needed for all uses of fluoride. This pertains to water fluoridation, as well as all dental-based products, whether administered at home or in the dental office.

In addition to the imperative need for informed consumer consent, education about this chemical is likewise essential. Providing education about fluoride risks and fluoride toxicity to medical and dental professionals, medical and dental students, consumers, and policy makers is crucial to improving the safety of public health.

Since there is a lack of safety, cavities can be prevented in safer ways without fluoride!

Considering fluoride’s lack of safety, there are fluoride-free options available for all of the dental products you use at home, but you have to be sure to check
the product labeling.

There are fluoride-free strategies in which to prevent dental caries.  Given the current levels of exposure, policies should reduce and work toward eliminating avoidable sources of fluoride, including water fluoridation, fluoride-containing dental materials, and other fluoridated products, as means to promote dental and overall health.

Unlike all other water treatment processes, fluoridation does not treat the water itself, but the person consuming it. The Food & Drug Administration accepts that fluoride is a drug, not a nutrient, when used to prevent disease. By definition, therefore, fluoridating water is a form of mass medication. This is why most western European nations have rejected the practice — because, in their view, adding a drug to everyone’s water supply violates the basic medical tenet that each individual has a right to “informed consent.”

Fluoride Article Authors

( Chairman of the Board )

Dr. Jack Kall, DMD, FAGD, MIAOMT, is a Fellow of the Academy of General Dentistry and a past President of the Kentucky chapter. He is an Accredited Master of the International Academy of Oral Medicine and Toxicology (IAOMT) and since 1996 has served as the Chairman of its’ Board of Directors. He also serves on the Bioregulatory Medical Institute’s (BRMI) Board of Advisors. He is a member of the Institute for Functional Medicine and American Academy for Oral Systemic Health.

Dr. Griffin Cole, MIAOMT received his Mastership in the International Academy of Oral Medicine and Toxicology in 2013 and drafted the Academy’s Fluoridation Brochure and the official Scientific Review on Ozone use in root canal therapy. He is a past President of the IAOMT and serves on the Board of Directors, the Mentor Committee, the Fluoride Committee, the Conference Committee and is the Fundamentals Course Director.

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