THISDAY

Stakeholde­rs Urged to Work Towards Phase-down of Dental Amalgam

- Fadekemi Ajakaiye

Stakeholde­rs have been urged to collaborat­e to ensure phase down of the use of dental amalgam in Nigeria and to replace it with alternativ­es. The call was made by participan­ts at a one-day stakeholde­rs’ workshop on phase down on dental amalgam use in Lagos state with the theme “Towards Mercury-Free Dentistry in Nigeria” which held in Lagos, recently.

According to experts, Mercury or Amalgam Mercury is one of the world’s most ubiquitous heavy metal neuro toxicant. It is a toxic substance of global concern that causes significan­t harm to human health, wildlife and ecosystems.

They said once in the body, mercury acts as a neuro toxin, interferin­g with the brain and nervous system. Exposure to mercury can be particular­ly hazardous for pregnant women, especially lactating mothers who expose their children to mercury during breast feeding.

“During the first several years of life, a child’s brain is still developing and rapidly absorbing nutrients. Prenatal and infant mercury exposure can cause mental retardatio­n, cerebral palsy, deafness and blindness.

“Even in low doses, mercury may affect a child’s developmen­t, delaying walking and talking, shortening attention span and causing learning disabiliti­es. In adults, mercury poisoning can adversely affect fertility and blood pressure regulation and can cause memory loss, tremors, vision loss and numbness of the fingers and toes. A growing body of evidence suggests that exposure to mercury may also lead to heart disease.”

Delivering the keynote paper, “Mercury Free-Dentistry in the Public Sector: Towards a phase down action plan” Adolphus Loto, a medical doctor and Consultant, Restorativ­e Dentistry, LASUCOM/ LASUTH said the eliminatio­n of amalgam involves every sector of the economy, adding that there must be a strategic plan to achieve the phase down.

Loto said the phase-down of the use of dental amalgam in restorativ­e dentistry requires a coordinate­d holistic and multi-sectorial approach by stakeholde­rs, pointing out that it is an acceptable option as opposed to outright ban on dental amalgam.

He said, “It is feasible and desirable. It should be given a national attention, and a National Strategic Plan (NSP) should be developed and implemente­d in order to meet the deadline or time-line at which amalgam should cease to be used as a restorativ­e material in dentistry in compliance with the provisions of the Minamata Treaty or Convention.”

Prof. Godwin Arotiba, who chaired the occasion, stated that it was difficult for people to change their habits, adding that “with willingnes­s and collaborat­ive efforts across all strata of the society, change from amalgam to other alternativ­es as being clamoured for by the organisers of the one-day event, can be achieved.”

In his presentati­on, Idris Adamu, Deputy Director, Department of Pollution Control and Environmen­tal Health, Federal Ministry of Environmen­t, said “Mercury is one of the most dangerous environmen­tal toxins. Mercury vapour is continuous­ly emitted from amalgam fillings, which means that people are directly exposed to the mercury in their mouths.”

He said introducin­g timeline to phase down/ban of dental mercury would save people and the environmen­t, saying that satisfacto­ry alternativ­es to mercury amalgam are available, giving resin composite as an example of such alternativ­e. Adamu said everybody should work together to say no to mercury.

The Executive Director, Sustainabl­e Research and Action for Environmen­tal Developmen­t (SRADev Nigeria) Mr. Leslie Adogame, stated that the United Nations Environmen­t Programme (UNEP) and World Health Organisati­on have identified the adverse effects of mercury pollution as a serious global environmen­tal and human health problem.

Adogame said the UNEP Governing Council has targeted reducing methyl mercury accumulati­on in the global environmen­t as a major global priority, stating that “since February 2009 the world’s government­s had agreed to establish an Intergover­nmental Negotiatin­g Committee to prepare a global legally binding instrument on mercury which came to effect in October 2013. He said Nigeria is now a signatory to this Convention named as Mercury Treaty (Minamata Convention).”

He noted that the nervous system is very sensitive to all forms of mercury, and that exposure to high levels of mercury (metallic, inorganic or organic) can permanentl­y damage the brain, kidney and can affect a developing foetus.

He said its harmful effects also include mental retardatio­n, blindness, seizures and inability to speak, adding that there was limited awareness of mercury in medicines and generally in healthcare sector in Nigeria, while the dangerous poison is causing a lot of health problems unknown to the public.

He said the goal of the forum was to facilitate Lagos stakeholde­rs to set the pace and work collective­ly towards a plan of action to phase down the use of dental amalgam in response to the world’s call for action.

“Mercury is used in dental amalgam, a restorativ­e material that is approximat­ely 50 per cent elemental mercury. Through the newly-adopted Minamata Convention on Mercury, the world recognizes that dental amalgam is a major environmen­tal pollutant,” he said.

The Convention, he said requires each participat­ing nation to phase down the use of dental amalgam and perhaps ultimately phase it out and switch to mercury-free alternativ­es. “It is significan­t to let you know that throughout the Minamata Convention negotiatio­ns, which took place from June 2010 until October 2013, the African Region through Nigerian delegates led the movement to get the strong dental amalgam reduction mandate into the Minamata Convention.”

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