Otago Daily Times

Antifluori­de campaigner invites university debate

- MIKE HOULAHAN Health reporter mike.houlahan@odt.co.nz

VISITING United States antifluori­de campaigner Paul Connett has criticised University of Otago academics for not attending a public meeting on campus about the substance.

Prof Connett and two Irish scientists, Vyvyan Howard and Declan Waugh, are touring New Zealand calling for a halt on fluoride being added to drinking water.

On Tuesday, the trio spoke at an event attended by about 300 people, where they argued that fluoride was a neurotoxin which reduced children’s IQs.

However, there was no comment at the meeting from Otago academics.

At a questionan­danswer session yesterday, Prof Connett said the university should be ashamed of its attitude to the fluoride debate.

‘‘Is this tower so ivory that it doesn’t matter?’’ he asked.

‘‘Taxpayers’ money has gone in to funding people’s education, their university degrees, their postgradua­te degrees, their professors­hips and salaries, and they don’t feel any obligation whatsoever to debate the science.’’

Prof Connett said the public needed to hear both sides of the debate — ‘‘to simply ignore us is unacceptab­le’’.

University health sciences provicecha­ncellor Paul Brunton said staff and students were free to attend the event if they had wanted to do.

‘‘It was a public event and although it was held at the university, it was not an official University of Otago event,’’ he said.

Students were encouraged to think critically and were exposed to a variety of viewpoints, with an emphasis on the peerreview­ed scientific literature.

‘‘Community water fluoridati­on has been closely and systematic­ally scrutinise­d by official bodies in a number of jurisdicti­ons over recent decades, and the outcomes of those have invariably supported the continuati­on — and indeed extension of — community water fluoridati­on as a valuable public health measure,’’ Prof Brunton said.

Prof Connett also challenged the findings of the 2014 Government­commission­ed report on fluoride by Sir Peter Gluckman and Sir David Skegg, which found there were no adverse effects of any significan­ce arising from fluoridati­on.

Prof Connett said there were errors in the men’s calculatio­ns which, once corrected, should have thrown their conclusion­s into doubt.

 ?? PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH ?? Hear me roar . . . Visiting US antifluori­de campaigner Paul Connett issues a challenge to University of Otago academics to debate the fluoridati­on issue.
PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH Hear me roar . . . Visiting US antifluori­de campaigner Paul Connett issues a challenge to University of Otago academics to debate the fluoridati­on issue.

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