Boston Globe:
How much fluoride is too much?
DIRECTORY: Health
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Articles / Boston Globe 1985
Boston Globe
November 25, 1985
How much fluoride is too much?
EPA would boost amount allowed in water; critics see dangers
By David L. Chandler
Globe Staff
(See photocopy of article)
The Environmental Protection Agency has stirred the hornet's
nest of fluoridation by seeking to double
the maximum allowable amount of the mineral in the nation's
water supply - a move that is drawing sharp
criticism as a possible health hazard.
"I don't think the law really allows them to do this,"
says Jackie Warren, a lawyer with the Natural
Resources Defense Council, which plans to sue
the EPA to stop the change. "They're changing the standard
for reasons that have nothing to do with science."
Even the EPA says the change is being made directly in response
to pressure from areas that
complained about the costs of removing excessive fluoride from their
water supplies.
Final hearings on the rule change on Dec. 18 in Washington may
side-step the controversy altogether - even though there is a formidable
array of opposition, including the EPA's own scientific and
legal experts, an advisory panel hired to study the question for
the agency and a panel of scientists who examined it for the Surgeon
General's office.
While these and other groups favor a much stricter limit, the hearings
as now planned will deal only with the costs and technologies involved
in meeting the proposed standard - not whether it's a good idea.
At the center of the debate is fluorosis, or fluoride poisoning,
which can, all sides agree cause permanent brown stains on the teeth,
and in higher doses can cause skeletal changes that sometimes resemble
arthritis. No one disputes the fact that these effects occur; disagreements
center on how serious the effects are, and how much fluoride it
takes to cause these problems.
The American Dental Association, for
example, is against any restriction on the amount of fluoride in
water. "There's no evidence that fluoride at the levels found
in this country causes any health problems," says Lisa Watson,
a spokesperson for the ADA. "Fluorosis is a cosmetic effect
rather than a health effect."
On the other hand, Robert
Carton, a scientist in the toxic substances division of the
EPA, says there is evidence showing "you can get crippling
skeletal fluorosis" from the amount of fluoride that would
be permitted under the proposed rules.
Some of this evidence, ironically, was included in the EPA's own
report on the proposed change, published in the Federal Register
on Nov. 14, which stated: "The EPA agrees with the Surgeon
General that crippling fluorosis is an adverse health effect that
results from an intake of fluoride of 20 milligrams a day."
Elsewhere in the same report, the EPA cites a study of water consumption
showing that at least 1 percent of the population would get that
much fluoride from water that meets the proposed fluoride limit.
"This whole thing is politics," says Carton. "You're
not talking science at all." He contends that passage of the
more lenient standard would damage the agency's reputation. As president
of the union representing the agency's
professional staff, he detailed his objections in a letter
sent last week to EPA administrator Lee Thomas.
"There's in my mind, almost a suppression of science going
on," adds Warren of the Natural
Resources Defense Council, who is also a member of the EPA's
advisory council on drinking water standards. She says that "I've
never seen scientific evidence discounted and refused to be looked
at the way they're doing with fluoride."
First described in 1902
Fluorosis was first described in 1902 by Colorado Springs dentist
Frederick McKay, who noticed poermanent dark
markings on the teeth of some of his patients. He also noticed
that these patients seemed to have fewer cavities than others.
It took decades to establish that the cause of both effects was
a high concentration of fluoride that occurred naturally in the
local drinking water. But in those initial observations McKay had
already seen both the benefits and the dangers of the two-edged
sword of fluoridated water.
Ever since the mid-1940sa, when the US Public Health Service began
to recommend the addition of fluoride to public water supplies as
a decay-preventing measure, that policy has aroused both passionate
advocacy and fierce opposition.
But many studies over the years have confirmed the resulting improvement
in dental health. Dr. Daniel Bernstein of Boston University Medical
Center has conducted several studies on the effects of fluoride,
and says there is a consistent 80 percent reduction in cavities.
The Environmental Protection Agency, paradoxically, both advocates
and prohibits fluoride, depending on its concentration.
The agency endorses the chemical additive in the concentrations
recommended by the American Dental Assn. - 1 part per million, or
ppm, as a way of fostering dental heatlh. But the new regulation
would only prohbit concentrations of more than 4 ppm.
Areas such as South Carolina and many parts of the Southwest that
have a high natural fluoride level are lobbying hard for the change
- South Carolina, in fact, brought suit against the EPA to force
the change - since de-fluoridation is a very expensive process.
According to federal estimates, in some areas it could cost up to
$110 per person per year to meet the 2 ppm standard recommended
by the EPA's advisory council.
Fluoride occurs naturally in virtually all groundwater, in widely
varying amounts. Even in areas with the amount recommended by the
ADA, a certain percentage of fluorosis will occur. And according
to a study reported in the Journal of the American Dental Assn.,
20 percent of the population will suffer from "moderate to
severe" mottling of teeth in areas with 2.5 ppm of fluoride
- just above the present interim EPA standard, but well within the
proposed limit.
Surgeon General's report
The EPA justifies the proposed 4 ppm limit by citing a report by
the US Surgeon General in 1982, which stated that fluorosis was
not an adverse health effect. Critics charge that this is a case
of semantics and that mottled
teeth can cause severe psychological
problems and lowered self-esteem.
And according to many researchers, there are also much more serious
health effects likely at such high concentrations. The Environmental
Defense Council says the EPA has evidence that water with 4 ppm
of fluoride, which would meet the proposed standard, has led to
skeletal fluorosis.
Many experts point out that the net effect of multiple
sources of fluoride - water, food and drink, anticavity toothpaste
or rinse, even air pollution from such industries as aluminum smelting
- is that the limits should be lowered rather than raised.
Carton says that much more research is needed, and the ADA does
not dispute that: "I'd never say that there's enough research
about anything," ADA spokesperson Watson says.
Warren puts it more emphatically, saying: "It's not in the
public interest at all for possible adverse health effects to be
swept under the rug and not looked at."
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