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Water Fluoridation "Obsolete" According to Nobel
Prize Scientist
Nations who still practice it "should feel ashamed of themselves"
On October 4, 2005, two members of the Fluoride Action Network
-- Michael Connett and Chris Neurath -- traveled to Gothenburg,
Sweden, to interview Dr. Arvid Carlsson, a famed pharmacologist
at Gothenburg University and recent winner of the Nobel
Prize in Medicine/Physiology.
In the 1970s, Dr. Carlsson was an outspoken
opponent of two failed attempts to fluoridate water supplies in
Sweden. Thanks in large part to his efforts, Sweden remains fluoridation
free. As Carlsson notes, "nobody talks about [fluoridation]
anymore" in Sweden.
As with the vast majority of western
Europe, Sweden has rejected water fluoridation, but has still
experienced the same decline
in tooth decay as experienced in heavily fluoridated countries
such as the United States.
Video Clips of Interview -- Quicktime
required
Clip 1: Fluoridation 'Obsolete' -- [broadband
| dial-up]
Clip 2: No reason to ingest fluoride -- [broadband
| dial-up]
Clip 3: Responding to CDC -- [broadband
| dial-up]
Excerpts of Interview with Dr. Arvid Carlsson, October
4, 2005
CONNETT: So, what happened in Sweden. The fluoridation issue was
proposed...
CARLSSON: Yes, I think it was up twice... The second time, there
was a proposal that the Swedish Parliament should allow addition
of fluorine to the water supplies in Sweden and I became rather
active as I had been the first time, and I think I was perhaps the
one who more than anyone else convinced the Swedish parliament that
this was not a good thing. So, it was voted out, this proposal.
And that was around 1980. So you can see it's a long time ago. And
after that addition of fluorine to water supplies in Sweden has
not been an issue anymore. These days nobody talks about it anymore.
###
CONNETT: Do you think that your background in pharmacology sort
of informed your view of fluoridation as a medical practice?
CARLSSON: Of course. I mean, as I said before, this is against
all principles of modern pharmacology. It's really obsolete. No
doubt about that. I mean, I think those nations that are using it
should feel ashamed of themselves. It's against science.
###
CARLSSON: Fluorine has a protecting action against caries, but
this is a local effect... If you drink it, you are running the risk
of all kinds of toxic actions. And, of course, there are such actions.
We have the mottled teeth, which is not a small thing... There is
no need, really, to go any further into all these other toxicity
problems because I think the mottled teeth is enough. This is something
you shouldn't expose citizens to.
CONNETT: In the United States, the dental community says that dental
fluorosis is just a cosmetic effect, it's just spots on the teeth.
Do you see mottled teeth as a toxic effect of fluoride, or as simply
a cosmetic effect?
CALRSSON: Well, it is a toxic effect and a cosmetic effect. These
are not mutually exclusive. It's toxic and it's cosmetic.
###
CONNETT: What about this notion of using the water supply as a
vehicle of delivering medication? Can you speak to what you see
as the problems with that?
CARLSSON: Yea, it's absolutely obsolete. In modern pharmacology
it's so clear that even if you have a fixed dose of a drug, the
individuals respond very differently to one and the same dose. Now,
in this case, you have it in the water and people are drinking different
amounts of water. So you have huge variations in the consumption
of this drug. So, it's against all modern principles of pharmacology.
It's obsolete, I don't think anybody in Sweden, not a single
dentist, would bring up this question in Sweden anymore.
###
CONNETT: You mentioned that fluoride's benefits come from the local,
or topical, effect. Could you just discuss a little more what you
see as the significance of that fact? Why is it important that fluoride's
benefit is topical, and not from ingestion?
CARLSSON: Well, in pharmacology, if the effect is local, it's of
course absolutely awkward to use it in any other way than as a local
treatment. I mean this is obvious. You have the teeth there,
they're available for you, why drink the stuff?... I see no reason
at all for giving it in any other way than locally -- topically,
if you wish.
###
CONNETT: In the US, the Centers for Disease Control, which is a
US government health body, has proclaimed water fluoridation to
be one of the top ten public health achievements of the twentieth
century.
CARLSSON: I disagree profoundly. |