AlkalizeForHealth



"The doctor of the future will give no medicine, but will interest his patients in the care of the human frame, in diet and in the cause and prevention of disease." - Thomas Edison See also the following pages: Nationwide call for congressional hearings on fluoridation of drinking water. Canadian government report questions value of fluoridation. The case against fluoride. Fluoridation and cancer. Fluoride and thyroid cancer. Fluoridation of drinking water. American Dental Association health fraud re: fluoride. | CANADIAN GOVERNMENT REPORT QUESTIONS VALUE OF WATER FLUORIDATION (From the New York State Coalition Opposed to Fluoridation, April 23, 2001) Fluoridation probably does more damage than good, says a Canadian government report. The best solution is to cease fluoridation, the author suggests.
Dr. David Locker, a University of Toronto dentistry professor, reports "No Canadian studies provide evidence that water fluoridation is effective in reducing (tooth) decay in contemporary child populations." Locker is author of the 2001 "Benefits and Risks of Water Fluoridation," prepared for the Ontario Ministry of Health and Health Canada.
"Current studies support the view that dental fluorosis has increased in both fluoridated and non-fluoridated communities (at)... rates of 20-75% in the former and 12-45% in the latter," Locker reports. Dental fluorosis -- white spotted, yellow or brown permanently stained and sometimes pitted teeth -- can only be hidden with expensive cosmetic dentistry not usually covered by insurance.
Current fluoridation studies are flawed, reports Locker. Fluoride's alleged beneficial effects are topical; ingested fluoride causes fluorosis. Sodium fluoride and silicofluorides are added to 62% of U.S. and 40% of Canadian water supplies to mimic the natural calcium-fluoride community water sources like that of the Southwest U.S.A. where researchers, in the early 1900's, unraveled the epidemic of embarrassingly brown stained teeth, that were curiously decay resistant. Fluoride, the villain that stained teeth, was the assumed cavity fighting superhero.
So, in the late 1940's, officials started adding artificial fluoride to many U.S. drinking waters to improve America's dental health. A 1981 survey hinted they were already on the wrong track. This National Institutes of Health Survey reported that cavities were still lowest in the Southwest region. Over thirty years of artificial fluoridation across the U.S. should have leveled off decay rates. But it didn't then and it hasn't since.
"We believe the calcium and other, now well-known bone and teeth building minerals in the water and soils, was responsible for lower decay rates – not the fluoride," says lawyer Paul Beeber, President, New York State Coalition Opposed to Fluoridation.
For more information, please contact: Paul Connett, Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry, St. Lawrence University, Canton, N.Y.;
ggvideo@northnet.org; or Paul Beeber, President of N.Y.S. Coalition Opposed to Fluoridation, nyscof@aol.com
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