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Town votes to remove fluoride
from drinking water
AP
Thursday, March 15, 2007
MOUNT DESERT, Maine --The Maine Dental Association expressed
disappointment after residents voted to remove fluoride from the
local drinking water, making Mount Desert the state’s first
community to make such a change.
The decision came after the Mount Desert Water District said studies
conducted during the past few years call into question the safety
of fluoridation. The vote in last week’s referendum was
229-to-42 to remove fluoride.
The Maine Dental Association said it was aware of the claims made
by the water district and believes the studies cited are questionable.
”We think there is ample support for the safety and efficacy
of community water fluoridation, and that has been supported by
numerous national and international organizations,” said
Frances Miliano, the association’s executive director.The
decision marks the first setback in Maine’s trend toward
fluoridation of community water supplies. The dental association
said 74 percent of communities add fluoride to public water, although
two of the largest cities _ Portland and Augusta _ didn’t
take such action until the 1990s.
All five members of the Mount Desert district’s board had
endorsed removal of the chemical that had been added to the town
water supply in 1963 to help fight tooth decay.
Paul Slack, the district manager, said the decision to promote
the removal was not based on any one particular study but on a
number of findings, including those suggesting that fluoridation
poses increased risk of bone cancer and bone fractures.
Slack also noted that because fluoride has been found to be effective
in preventing tooth decay when applied topically, there is no
longer a need to swallow the chemical.
”When you take fluoride out the water, people may choose
to apply it through toothpaste or mouthwash,” he said. ”So
if they have that option, allowing it to remain in the public
drinking water represents an unnecessary risk to health with little
or no benefit.”
While the rate of tooth decay in children has been dropping over
the years, rising sugar consumption has caused the decline to
level off, Miliano said. She said removing fluoride could cause
the decay rate to begin rising.
She said the only other referendum to discontinue fluoridation
took place in November in Jackman, where voters elected to maintain
the status quo.
”We certainly hope this is just one small blip,” she
said of the Mount Desert vote. ”Opinion polls show that
the clear majority of the public believes that water should be
fluoridated.”
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