Water Fluoridation and the Environment: Current Perspective in the United States

2004 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 343-350 ◽  
Author(s):  
Howard F. Pollick
2001 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 120-129 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan O. Griffin ◽  
Barbara F. Gooch ◽  
Stuart A. Lockwood ◽  
Scott L. Tomar

2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 376-384
Author(s):  
J.A. Curiel ◽  
A.E. Sanders ◽  
G.D. Slade

Introduction: Expansion of community water fluoridation has stalled in the United States, leaving 115 million Americans without fluoridated drinking water. Objective: This study used spatial regression methods to assess contributions of supply-side factors (neighboring counties’ fluoridation coverage) and demand-side factors (health literacy, education, and population density of the local county) in predicting the extent of fluoridation in US counties. Methods: For this cross-sectional ecological analysis, data from the 2014 Water Fluoridation Reporting System for all 3,135 US counties were merged with sociodemographic data from the 2014 American Community Survey and county-level estimates of health literacy based on the National Association of Adult Literacy Survey. We employed multilevel geographically weighted autoregressive models to predict fluoridation coverage of each county as a function of fluoridation coverage of neighboring counties and local-county covariates: either health literacy or sociodemographic characteristics. Akaike’s Information Criterion was used to distinguish the better model in terms of explanatory power and parsimony. Results: In the best-fit model, an increase from the first to third quartile of neighboring counties’ fluoridation coverage was associated with an increase of 27.76 percentage points (95% confidence limits [CI] = 27.71, 27.81) in a local county’s fluoridation coverage, while an increase from the first to third quartile of local county’s health literacy was associated with an increase of 2.8 percentage points (95% CL = 2.68, 2.89). The results are consistent with a process of emulation, in which counties implement fluoridation based upon their population’s health literacy and the extent of fluoridation practiced in neighboring counties. Conclusion: These results suggest that demand for community water fluoridation will increase as health literacy increases within a county. Furthermore, when considering expansion of fluoridation, non-fluoridated communities can benefit from precedents from nearby communities that are fluoridated. Knowledge Transfer Statement: Expanded coverage of community water fluoridation has stalled in the United States. The economic theory of diffusion describes how, over time and space, policy enacted in one community can influence public opinion in a neighboring community. This study applies geospatial analysis of county-level data and the theory of policy diffusion to demonstrate that fluoridated counties can promote the implementation of community water fluoridation in their neighboring, non-fluoridated communities.


2006 ◽  
Vol 114 (1) ◽  
pp. 130-134 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark D. Macek ◽  
Thomas D. Matte ◽  
Thomas Sinks ◽  
Dolores M. Malvitz

1999 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
pp. 3-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keith E. Heller ◽  
Woosung Sohn ◽  
Brian A. Burt ◽  
Stephen A. Eklund

Author(s):  
Brien G. Benoit ◽  
T. David Marshall ◽  
Leslie P. Ivan ◽  
Pierre Forcier ◽  
Kenneth G. Evans

Canadians are suing their doctors for malpractice, at three times the rate they were 15 years ago, and during that period awards to injured patients have quadrupled in size. Since the middle 1970's when the first medical malpractice “crisis” occurred in the United States, Canadian clinical neuroscientists have felt increasingly threatened by the prospect of a lawsuit for negligence. Since medicine is intrinsically a risk taking business, adverse outcomes are inevitable. Nevertheless, accusations of negligence and carelessness set out in a Statement of Claim causes considerable stress for the defendant physician, who frequently reacts with self-doubt, depression and aggressive behaviour. A “tort” is defined as a wrongful act, and the 4 elements comprising the tort of medical malpractice are: a breech of standard care, the breech was the proximate cause of the injury, the injury produced measurable damage, and it was foreseeable that the injury would have been less injurious to the patient if the caregiver had conducted a different course. In order to put these issues into current perspective, this symposium was convened as part of the XXIV Canadian Congress of Neurological Sciences, held in Ottawa June 17, 1989.


2015 ◽  
Vol 43 (S1) ◽  
pp. 95-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
Micah L. Berman ◽  
Annice E. Kim

In the 20th century, public health was responsible for most of the 30-year increase in average life expectancy in the United States.1 Most of the significant advances in public health (e.g., vaccinations, water fluoridation) required the combined effort of scientists and attorneys. Scientists identified public health threats and the means of controlling them, but attorneys and policymakers helped convert those scientific discoveries into laws that could change the behavior of industries or individuals at a population level. In tobacco control, public health scientists made the groundbreaking discovery that smoking caused lung cancer, but attorneys and policymakers developed and implemented the policies and litigation strategies that helped reduce smoking rates by more than half over the past 50 years.


2018 ◽  
Vol 57 (4) ◽  
pp. 518-539
Author(s):  
Frank Zelko

For the past seventy years, a host of scientific and public health bodies in the United States have strongly endorsed the practice of adding fluoride compounds to public water supplies as a prophylactic against dental caries. Throughout that period, a constant undercurrent of skepticism and outright opposition has slowed the adoption of the practice in the United States and limited its spread to just a handful of countries around the world. One of the attractions of water fluoridation is its affordability: the fluoride compounds are sourced from the phosphate and aluminum industries, for whom they would otherwise constitute an annoying toxic waste disposal problem. Despite this, proponents have nonetheless succeeded in shaping a narrative that casts fluoridation as “natural” or at least mimicking nature. I demonstrate how fluoridationists were able to persuasively argue that adding a pollutant to the water supply was safe and natural. In the process, I examine how environmental historians and historians of science approach topics such as fluoridation. I suggest that as a result of the influence of science and technology studies and an ontological turn toward hybridity, the two subdisciplines are becoming increasingly convergent.


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