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United States The Courts

EPA Must Address Fluoridated Water's Risk To Children's IQs, US Judge Rules (reuters.com) 153

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: A federal judge in California has ordered the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to strengthen regulations for fluoride in drinking water, saying the compound poses an unreasonable potential risk to children at levels that are currently typical nationwide. U.S. District Judge Edward Chen in San Francisco on Tuesday sided (PDF) with several advocacy groups, finding the current practice of adding fluoride to drinking water supplies to fight cavities presented unreasonable risks for children's developing brains.

Chen said the advocacy groups had established during a non-jury trial that fluoride posed an unreasonable risk of harm sufficient to require a regulatory response by the EPA under the Toxic Substances Control Act. "The scientific literature in the record provides a high level of certainty that a hazard is present; fluoride is associated with reduced IQ," wrote Chen, an appointee of Democratic former President Barack Obama. But the judge stressed he was not concluding with certainty that fluoridated water endangered public health. [...] The EPA said it was reviewing the decision.
"The court's historic decision should help pave the way towards better and safer fluoride standards for all," Michael Connett, a lawyer for the advocacy groups, said in a statement on Wednesday.
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EPA Must Address Fluoridated Water's Risk To Children's IQs, US Judge Rules

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  • by VeryFluffyBunny ( 5037285 ) on Saturday September 28, 2024 @08:05AM (#64823643)
    ...in a peer-reviewed scientific paper:

    In the movie Dr. Strangelove, General Ripper claimed that water fluoridation was destroying “our precious bodily fluids”—a reference to the claim that water fluoridation was a conspiracy designed to weaken US willpower and make the country susceptible to a Communist takeover.

    Link to paper: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/p... [nih.gov] =D

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      It's not really a scientific paper, it's a kind of editorial, written by a historian and funded by the humanities research council. Journals, including scientific journals, publish editorials, opinion pieces, tributes, etc. along with regular articles.

      That doesn't mean it's not true, but you get to use more fuzzy language and reviewers aren't likely to string you up for making unsupported claims.

      • What's the humanities research council? If you mean the UK's Arts and Humanities Research Council, they don't do science stuff. This paper was funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.
        • >What's the humanities research council?

          > This paper was funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.

          You answered your own question. Seems rather obvious really...

        • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

          You answered your own question. Canada has three research councils: Canadian Institute for Health Research - health; National Science and Engineering Research Council - science and engineering; Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council - social sciences and humanities.

    • ...in a peer-reviewed scientific paper:

      In the movie Dr. Strangelove, General Ripper claimed that water fluoridation was destroying “our precious bodily fluids”—a reference to the claim that water fluoridation was a conspiracy designed to weaken US willpower and make the country susceptible to a Communist takeover.

      Link to paper: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/p... [nih.gov] =D

      Purity of essence!

  • "This is stupid and false, and while we're addressing it, we're not going to change our policies based on stupidity" There we go.

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      Do we know that it's false? It could be a minor effect, or there could be a threshold. We do know that excess fluoridation causes teeth to become brittle (and unsightly). So there definitely SHOULD be limits. What they are ... well, that's less clear to me.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        or there could be a threshold.

        No, there could not. Seriously. Stop inventing things.

        • by HiThere ( 15173 )

          On what basis do you deny that there could be a threshold? Many biochemical things DO have thresholds. (In fact, fluoride making teeth brittle is one of them. Small amounts don't do that.)

          • by gweihir ( 88907 )

            You need to ask? You are _incompetent_ and not conversant with the state of the art. Not my job to fix that

  • by PsychoSlashDot ( 207849 ) on Saturday September 28, 2024 @10:17AM (#64823805)
    A judge - inherently not an expert on health issues - is telling an agency that exists specifically to regulate dangerous substances that they need to regulate more?

    You'd think the EPA would already be biased towards excess caution, because the more they regulate, the more they're seen to be "doing something". Like the way auditors always, always find something to justify their existence, it'd be odd for the EPA to be letting things slide... at least if there's actual science telling them they should regulate more.

    The opinions of non-experts should be weighted much lower than those of experts.
    • Most people will let sleeping dogs lie until forced otherwise. The EPA is not only *not* immune to politics (the real kind, not the red vs. blue kind) but exposed to them more than most and so even if they know there's something worth looking into, why would they spend their budget and their political capital in chasing it down when the harm might be mostly to them than the people who are currently slightly/moderately/severely over/under fluoridated? And not even for the organisation as a whole, if the org

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      This is because of the NIH study.
      https://ntp.niehs.nih.gov/what... [nih.gov]

      You don't need to be a scientist to recognize the scientific consensus just got shattered. Until the witch hunt can get the NIH scientists painted as perpetuating bad science, pretending there is an overwhelming consensus is plainly untenable.

      There is a lot of similarity between this case and lab leak theory. In both cases there is an underlying "you can't handle the truth" motivation on part of a lot of scientists, which causes friction beca

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Who said judges are smart or capable of doing a good job?

  • Well, good. I'm glad that after 75 years of water fluoridation someone is finally looking at the health effects. You'd really think that maybe someone would have looked at it before but I guess they haven't. Go figure.

    I mean, it's not like we have ready-made test and control groups. Say, kids and adults who've spend their entire lives drinking fluoridated water, and other kids and adults who've spent their entire lives in rural areas with private wells. If we had that we could just compare the two groups

    • This isn't about water that is fluoridated to recommended levels, at least not from what I can tell from the poorly written coverage. It seems that, in some places, the natural fluoride levels might be unacceptably high or that some water utilities are adding too much fluoride. The recommended fluoride level is 0.7 mg/L. A higher level 2.0mg/L requires that the utility notify customers. A level of 4.0mg/L is considered unsafe to drink. However, I don't believe that the upper limit is enforceable. (i.e.
    • Well, good. I'm glad that after 75 years of water fluoridation someone is finally looking at the health effects. You'd really think that maybe someone would have looked at it before but I guess they haven't. Go figure.

      I'm guessing they have.

      I mean, it's not like we have ready-made test and control groups. Say, kids and adults who've spend their entire lives drinking fluoridated water, and other kids and adults who've spent their entire lives in rural areas with private wells. If we had that we could just compare the two groups and see if either one has, on average, a markedly higher IQ than the other. Alas. We may never know the answer.

      Ok... now control for the effects of growing up on a farm vs city or suburb, the education available to those kids, the differing genetics between families who live on farms and those who don't, the wildly inconsistent natural levels of fluoride in those wells, etc, etc.

      There's a reason that even after looking at multiple studies they could only come to the determination with moderate confidence [nih.gov].

    • You'd really think that maybe someone would have looked at it before but I guess they haven't. Go figure.

      That someone finds something new now doesn't mean that no one has looked in the past. In fact the toxicity and health effects were very actively studied before it was added to drinking water. That's also why there was a national guideline drawn up for maximum safe dosage. Even the WHO has weighed in on an international recommendation based on studies over the years and their recommendation provides citations of the effects and test of fluoride on health back to before World War 2.

      I mean, it's not like we have ready-made test and control groups. Say, kids and adults who've spend their entire lives drinking fluoridated water

      Did we have those before we

  • by jvkjvk ( 102057 ) on Saturday September 28, 2024 @11:36AM (#64824017)

    Now, we are letting judges be the last word in regulation instead of people who have spent their life studying the issue.

    Good job Supreme Court!

  • ...it doesn't mean that the crazies are right, they're just crazy
    Many years ago, scientists noticed a pattern where naturally occurring fluoride correlated with lower rates of tooth decay
    It seemed reasonable to add fluoride at the time, since no obvious adverse effects were seen in areas with natural fluoride
    The crazies invented all sorts of wild nonsense to oppose fluoridation, none of it based on accurate science
    Years later, researchers have found evidence that fluoride can be harmful
    This is how science w

    • I don't believe there is any new evidence here. Fluoride at the recommended level of 0.7mg/L is beneficial. There is a concentration at which it becomes harmful but that concentration is significantly higher. The same is true for just about any substance. Even drinking too much water (flouridated or otherwise) can kill you. The EPA does not enforce an upper limit on fluoride in drinking water. I don't know why. Really there's no reason to deliver drinking water that isn't in the specified range.
  • A federal judge in California has ordered the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to strengthen regulations for fluoride in drinking water

    I thought the Supreme Court's ruling on Chevron deference meant that executive agencies are virtually powerless to set regulations. If that's the case, the EPA would have to wait for the geniuses in Congress to codify the exact amount of fluoride allowed in the water and even then, all that the EPA could do is enforce that legislation.

  • Must be a Trump appointee.
    • Or it is simply a judge requiring the agencies to do work required by the statutory infrastructure (the laws, not the regulations). Funding a study after the first 70 years of public health work should be welcomed by all sides,despite conspiracy theory stigmas. I am at the point any scientific theory needs to be regularly retested, and the softer sciences need much more inspection than they have gotten in the "golden age" of public health. I did not know that the anti cavity effect of tap water flu

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