Health fear for children sparks fury over fluorideKamal Ahmed and Mark Townsend, The Observer 2 Nov. © The Observer 2003 , Sweeping new measures to allow fluoride to be added to large
parts of Britain's water supply are set to provoke a huge
political row amid fears that 'mass medication' may harm children
and lead to more tooth disease. Ministers will try to force the new Water Bill through the House
of Commons this week before a crucial vote on the issue in nine
days. The Government will argue that adding fluoride improves
dental health, particularly among the young.
Health Ministers want to give strategic health authorities powers
to order water companies to add fluoride to supplies. About five
million people, mostly in the Midlands, already have fluoride
artificially added under agreements going back decades.
But opponents of fluoridation argue that the new government rules
would make it far easier for water companies to start adding the
chemical. They say that up to half Labour backbench MPs and many
Conservative MPs will vote against the Bill, putting the
Government in danger of an embarrassing defeat.
'It is mass medication, an additive in the water supply,' said
Brian Donohoe, the Labour MP for Cunninghame South in Ayrshire,
who is leading the rebellion.
Bill Wiggin, the Conservative MP who sits in the Commons
committee scrutinising the Bill, said the scientific community
was split on whether adding fluoride to the water could have
adverse health effects such as dental fluorosis (a discolouring
of the teeth due to excess fluoride) or brittle bone disease. 'We
need proper scientific evidence before we proceed any further,'
he said.
One of the Government's most senior advisers on science condemned
the move as 'crass stupidity'. Leading toxicologist Dr Vyvyan
Howard, of Liverpool University, said: 'We should be stopping the
whole thing now rather than expanding the use of fluoride. It is
totally unnecessary.
'One dose for all is wrong. Toddlers and those that have weak
kidneys are at greater risk.' Howard is a member of the
Government's advisory committee on pesticides.
He said there were 10 parts per billion of fluoride in human
breast milk, 100 times less than that proposed for drinking
water.
'The fact that we have evolved a system of production of breast
milk - which is low in fluoride but high in chlorine - tells us
that, probably, there is a reason for this and we need to look at
that.'
Some members of the Muslim community have objected to the plans
on cultural and religious grounds.
Donohoe will propose an amendment to the Bill which says that
fluoride can be added to the water only if the local authority
agrees. Donohoe's move, which has cross-party support, could open
the way for local referendums on the issue.
Campaigners believe that once they have forced local votes, the
public will decide against adding the chemical which in its basic
form is regulated as a Class II poison. In large doses it is
lethal.
The Government will say that it is willing to give water
companies unlimited liability cover in case they are sued by
people worried about the health implications.
The cover will be open-ended and campaigners against fluoride say
legal bills could run to millions of pounds. The Government is
already likely to face a legal challenge to the overall policy if
it is passed in the next fortnight.
'If the Government does end up paying, how many millions of
pounds will it cost?' said Wiggin. 'We have asked them that and
they have not come up with a figure. It seems they have no idea.'
Melanie Johnson, the Public Health Minister, said that putting
fluoride in the water, which is supported by the British Dental
Association and the British Medical Association, would improve
dental health for many of the poorest people in Britain.
'Although there have been substantial improvements in dental
health over the last 30 years, there continue to be areas where
there are considerable numbers of children with the disease,' she
told The Observer.
'These inequalities can be avoided. For example, five year olds
in the West Midlands, where drinking water is fluoridated, had on
average nearly three times fewer decayed or filled primary teeth
than those in the North West, where it's not fluoridated.'
Johnson said that strategic health authorities would have to be
involved in 'local consultations' before going ahead with
fluoridation schemes. But she said that she was against giving
local authorities the power to decide.
'This is a public health matter which we feel should be owned by
the Health Service,' she said. She denied that offering indemnity
was an admission that water companies could be sued over health
fears.
'We want all water companies to operate on a level playing
field,' she said. 'We don't want a water supplier who agrees to
fluoridate to incur any additional liabilities to one that does
not have a fluoridation scheme.
'We're recognising the importance of indemnities to the water
industry. It is not recognising any health danger from fluoride
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