Fluoride Action Network

Victims break the silence

Source: Penrith Star | September 30th, 2009 | By Emily Wolfinger
Location: Australia

MT RIVERVIEW resident Steve Quinn laid a wreath at the NSW Forgotten Australians Remembrance Day last month in honour of fathers who did not return from war and those separated from their children because of war trauma and injuries.

The Sydney event honoured the 200,000 Australians abused and neglected as children in church, charity and state-run institutions.

For Mr Quinn, it meant a lot.

“There are many people who never got over what happened to them at institutions and the apology will go a long way to diminish some of that trauma,” he said.

Mr Quinn said survivors would not be able to draw closer to complete closure until a scheme was implemented to assist them with such expenses as treatment for trauma suffered.

“I have had to get very expensive treatment over the years for depression,” he said. “I am fortunate that I have a job where I can afford to pay for it but a lot of people don’t.”

Mr Quinn and his brother were in and out of institutions for nearly 10 years, spending time in the Red Cross Children’s Home at Cronulla and, later, the Church of England boys’ home at Carlingford, where there was a “culture of violence”.

“It was in the years when they were experimenting with FLUORIDE. It was some sort of dental research and as a part of that process, we were subjected to regular medical and psychological assessment.”

Mr Quinn was only six when he and his brother were first separated from their parents after family breakdown and his mother’s admission into hospital for cancer treatment.

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Note from Fluorde Action Network.

Excerpt from abstract:

… The field trial was established in Medan, Sumater… Subjects chosen were 176 children who were residents of two orphanages and a boarding school for children of poor rural families
Ref: Mulyani, McIntyre J. 2002. Caries inhibitory effect of fluoridated sugar in a trial in Indonesia. Australian Dental Journal 47(4):314-320.

Also, this comment:

… Tooth decay was also low in Britain and continental Europe during World War II, when sugar was a scarce commodity,16 and in the 1950s at the Hopewood orphanage, near Bowral NSW Australia, where the children were fed on wholemeal bread and other “whole” foods.17 …
Ref: Diesendorf M. 1995. How science can illuminate ethical debates. A case study on water fluoridation. Fluoride 28(2):87-104.

17. Goldsworthy NE. Every doctor a dietitian. Medical Journal of Australia 1 285-286 1960; Harris R. Biology of the children of Hopewood House, Bowral, Australia. 4. Observations on dental-caries. experience extending over five years. Journal of Dental Research 42 1387 1963.