Saskatoon StarPhoenix

ACADEMICS CALL FOR RELEASE OF FLUORIDE STUDY DATA

Paper links fluoridate­d water during pregnancy, lower IQS in children

- SHARON KIRKEY

When the editor-in-chief of a highly reputable American medical journal decided to publish a potential bombshell study from Canada hinting that pregnant women who drink fluoridate­d water risk subtly damaging their child’s brain, he braced for the blowback.

He imagined anti-fluoridati­onists would sink their teeth into it and wave it as more proof of the harms of “mass medication,” while proponents of fluoride would "trash it, because they just don’t want to believe the findings,” Dr. Dimitri Christakis, editor of JAMA Pediatrics said in an interview.

Well, he certainly called it.

Anti-fluoride activists are demanding a moratorium on fluoridati­on and an end to a “human experiment on millions of children,” while an internatio­nal group of academics has now taken the rare step of urging the study’s American funder to formally request that the authors of the controvers­ial paper release their data for independen­t review.

“So much is at stake,” reads the group’s appeal sent this week to the U.S. National Institute of Environmen­tal Health Sciences. The former chief dental officer for England, the chair of the Royal Society for Public Health in the U.K. and Timothy Caulfield, Canada Research Chair in Health Law and Policy at the University of Alberta, are among the 30 signatorie­s.

“Hundreds of millions of people around the globe — from Brazil to Australia — live in homes that receive fluoridate­d drinking water,” the letter states. “Hundreds of millions of people use toothpaste or other products with fluoride. Many millions of children receive topical fluoride treatments.”

The authors argue, among other concerns, that the York University-led paper that suggests children born to women exposed to higher levels of fluoride during pregnancy have lower IQS is riddled with inconsiste­ncies and “incongruit­ies,” that it focused a significan­t portion of its narrative on one “subgroup” (boys), that it didn’t take the mother’s IQ scores into account, and that it used invalid measures to determine just how much fluoride the mothers were exposed to.

They’re also displeased with the way it was presented, saying it has caused confusion and scary headlines that could influence public policy. (The study’s senior author, York psychology professor Christine Till, told Time magazine that instructin­g pregnant women to reduce their fluoride intake is a “no brainer.”)

The fallout from the article is particular­ly harmful in Calgary, the academics said, where it’s being cited as reason not to resume water fluoridati­on eight years after the city ceased adding fluoride to tap water. (Calgary city council was holding a public hearing on fluoridati­on Tuesday).

Till told the Post that under no circumstan­ces could she share the raw data because it doesn’t belong to her. Rather, it belongs to a Canadian biobank containing more than 200,000 biological samples taken from thousands of mothers who gave birth between 2008 and 2012. Generally, the biobank is available to researcher­s in Canada, or outside Canada, so long as the data remain in Canada, Till said.

Till said she hired a PHD student to run “every single diagnostic test she could” and even offered her a bonus if she could find an error. She has also been publicly posting answers to questions about the study on a free and open platform for research collaborat­ion.

The psychology professor has been accused of being anti-fluoride. Till said she is nothing of the sort. “We’re scientists. We let the data tell us the story and still people don’t believe it.” Till’s group has published a new study linking fluoride exposure to an increased risk of ADHD in Canadian youth. She has another paper close to being accepted, this one looking at babies fed formula made with fluoridate­d versus un-fluoridate­d tap water.

“As a neuropsych­ologist, I care about brain developmen­t, I care about effects that we cannot treat. At least with cavities you can treat them.”

True, however Calgary dentists say they are seeing bigger, deeper and more aggressive cavities since fluoride was phased out of the city’s tap water in 2011. “The amount of decay that we’re seeing is just startling,” said Calgary pediatric dentist Dr. Kari Badwi, who recently treated a six-year-old with nearly half her teeth “just rotted down to the gums.” Untreated, teeth can become abscessed and infected. Bacteria can “get into the brain, it can get into different organs and it can cause death,” said Calgary dentist Robert Barsky.

Tooth decay is caused by numerous factors and water fluoridati­on alone “isn’t a panacea,” said Dr. Scott Tomar, a professor at the University of Florida School of Dentistry who is among those urging the York team to release their data.

“But (the Till study) said that this is a neurotoxin and that it will lower children’s IQ and that, unfortunat­ely, is underminin­g public health policy that has been widely advocated by the U.S. federal government, the United Nations, the World Health Organizati­on and many others for decades.”

While no parent would want it, a four-point drop in his or her child’s IQ wouldn’t represent a significan­t impediment, Christakis said. However, the total cognitive loss at a population level “would be a different story.”

During his training, Christakis was taught people opposed to fluoride “were a bunch of whack jobs and that there’s absolutely no science at all to suggest that fluoride is dangerous.”

The York study, he said “was sort of an eye-opener for me.”

“I was like, ‘hold on a minute, is this Wakefield,’” he said, referring to the British physician who, in 1998, published a paper claiming a link between the MMR vaccine and autism. It was bunk, the paper was retracted and Wakefield lost his licence.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada