Bay of Plenty Times

Fluoridati­on directive necessary

- Jo Raphael

So it’s finally happened. Fluoride is set to be added to a number of our drinking water supplies. Outgoing director general of health Dr Ashley Bloomfield has issued a directive for the mineral to be added to the remaining councils’ water supplies that haven’t already, including from our region the Rotorua Lakes, Tauranga City, Western Bay of Plenty District and Kawerau District Councils.

The Rotorua Lakes Council has been asked to add fluoride to two of its nine supplies — the central and eastern water supplies.

The Tauranga City Council has been directed to fluoridate its whole supply including the Waia¯ ri plant which is not yet online. The Western Bay of Plenty District Council has been asked to add fluoride to two of its eight supplies affecting Athenree and Wharawhara.

The writing was on the wall for those and other hold-out councils when the Health Act was amended last year to move the decisionma­king power from councils to the director general of health, citing the decision more a health issue rather than a political one.

Community leaders, dentists, oral health experts and child health experts have all lauded the decision.

It’s been labelled as a “gamechange­r” and an “important part of a toolkit” for dental health alongside consistent dental hygiene, regular dentist visits and a good diet.

The fortificat­ion of foods is not a new thing. Iodine has been added to table salt for many years.

And store-bought bread often contains folic acid, an important vitamin needed to prevent birth defects such as spina bifida.

Whether you label this a “nannystate” move or not, it’s clear somebody needed to step in and make that decision for the good of everybody.

Councils mooting such a move have been stymied in previous years by vocal anti-fluoridati­on activists and those who felt their right to choose outweighed the health benefits of others.

The Office of the Prime Minister’s chief science adviser has looked into new informatio­n about water fluoridati­on and found there was no evidence fluoride levels used in New Zealand caused any significan­t health issues.

Bloomfield says fluoridate­d water is safe for everyone to drink, including babies and the elderly.

But there is more we could be doing. I agree with Waiariki MP Rawiri Waititi when he says we should also be looking at making oral health check-ups more affordable.

I believe the oral health sector should be managed in much the same way we manage our primary health sector. The two are inextricab­ly linked.

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