Alan Johnson, the Health Secretary, has been accused of overstating
the benefits of adding fluoride to water in the fight against
dental disease.
Tooth decay in children across Europe has fallen irrespective
of whether there is fluoride in the water, authors of a report
have said.
Mr Johnson has called for it to be added to all water supplies
in the United Kingdom in an attempt to reduce the number of
people seeking dental treatment.
He said children in Manchester, where water is not fluoridated,
were twice as likely to have tooth decay as those in Birmingham,
where it is added.
Mr Johnson said a review of evidence by York University had
found that adding fluoride reduced the number of children with
tooth decay by 15 per cent.
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But the authors said their findings have been used selectively
and the impact of adding fluoride to water supplies was unclear.
They accused the Government of giving "an over-optimistic
assessment of the evidence in favour of fluoridation".
"The Department of Health's objectivity is questionable,"
said Sir Iain Chalmers, the editor of the James Lind Library
in Oxford, and Prof Trevor Sheldon, the deputy vice-chancellor
at York University, who conducted the review.
They said tooth decay in 12- year-olds has reduced across Europe
irrespective of whether there is fluoride in the water.
The countries with the biggest drop in childhood tooth decay
- Sweden, Netherlands, Finland and Denmark - do not fluoridate
the water.
Full
article here.