The Peterborough Examiner

Study look at fluoride in pregnant mothers

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A study published in September in the journal Environmen­tal Health Perspectiv­es has linked high urine fluoride levels in pregnant mothers to lower intelligen­ce in their children. This study, which analyzed data collected since 1994 in Mexico, is noteworthy for a number of reasons.

One of the lead researcher­s, Dr. Howard Hu of the University of Toronto School of Public Health noted the importance of measuring individual urine fluoride levels: “This is significan­t because previous studies estimated exposures based on neighborho­od measuremen­ts of drinking water fluoride levels, which are indirect and much less precise measures of exposure.”

The data was controlled for a high number of potential confounder­s, including gestationa­l age at birth, birthweigh­t, birth order, sex, maternal marital status, smoking history, age at delivery, IQ, education, socioecono­mic status and lead exposure.

There is limited data on fluoride levels in pregnant mothers in Canada and the US, but the negative effects were found to occur at urine levels common in non-pregnant North American adults. The IQ loss was up to between 5-6 points.

While one study cannot be considered proof of harm and Dr. Hu called for more research, he was not hesitant to recognize the implicatio­ns of the team’s findings: “This is a very rigorous epidemiolo­gy study. You just can’t deny it. It’s directly related to whether fluoride is a risk for the neurodevel­opment of children.”

The disturbing results shouldn’t be surprising, given previous research from China that showed IQ loss in children from high water fluoride areas. Those 50-plus studies prompted Harvard researcher Phillipe Grandjean to comment: “Fluoride seems to fit in with lead, mercury, and other poisons that cause chemical brain drain…”.

Given Health Canada’s promotion of fluoridati­on as “safe and effective”, the odds of them recommendi­ng caution by suggesting a suspension of fluoridati­on until further research is completed, is low. The responsibi­lity to act lies with councillor­s in fluoridate­d cities. I recommend that you contact your councillor­s and ask them to end this experiment until the research that should have been done before fluoridati­on began, is completed.

David Green Peterborou­gh

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