Scottish Daily Mail

Is fluoride really the key to good teeth?

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FLUORIDE stops the rot (Letters)? What rot! Birmingham’s water has been fluoridate­d since 1964, but the British Fluoridati­on Society has admitted systemic fluoridati­on is ‘the least important mechanism’ in preventing decay. In fact, decay in the city is up. Is this due to poorer families not being able to afford toothbrush­es and toothpaste? Compulsory fluoridati­on violates our human rights and doesn’t do ‘what it says on the tin’. JOY WARREN, Coventry. AS A junior dental student, we were told about the difference in the dental health of the people of North and South Shields, as the latter had natural fluoride in its water supply. I qualified as a dental surgeon at University College Hospital in London and moved to Vancouver, where my daughter was born. When she was discharged from the hospital, I was surprised to be given a small bottle of fluoride and told to add one drop to her bottle every other day. This was normal practice in British Columbia at the time. She has lovely teeth and has had only one filling as an adult. In contrast, her son, who is 13 and was born in London, has numerous fillings. Dr BARRY J. FIELD, Southport, Lancs. WHEN in 1979 the then Strathclyd­e Regional Council attempted to add fluoride to drinking water in a bid to improve dental health, it triggered one of the longest running civil cases ever seen. Community activist Catherine McColl claimed the council had exceeded its powers and judge Lord Jauncey agreed. Although he made no decision on the efficacy or otherwise of fluoride in tap water, no other council has since dared to follow Strathclyd­e’s lead. NICOLA TURNER, Edinburgh.

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