The long-term effects of banning fluoride from public drinking water across the country could cost families billions of dollars and result in millions of rotten teeth, a new analysis predicts.
The study, published Friday in JAMA Health Forum, shows that if all 50 states stopped community water fluoridation programs, kids in the U.S. could expect to develop 25.4 million more cavities within the next five years.
That’s the equivalent of a decayed tooth in 1 out of every 3 children.
The number of cavities would more than double in 10 years, to 53.8 million.
“That is a tremendous increase,” said Dr. Tom Reid, president of the Wisconsin Dental Association. “It’s another bit of proof that what we’ve been saying for over 80 years is 100% accurate: Proper dosing of community water fluoridation prevents cavities.” Reid was not involved with the new research.
Fluoride is under increasingly intense fire despite its dramatic ability to prevent tooth decay.
Two states, Utah and Florida, have already banned the addition of fluoride to public water systems. Others, including Kentucky, Massachusetts and Nebraska, could follow — all buoyed by Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s new role as head of the Department of Health and Human Services.
Under Kennedy’s leadership, HHS gutted the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s oral health division, which provides funds to states and local jurisdictions to promote good dental health practices, including the use of fluoride.
“We thought this was a really important time to be able to put some numbers to the discussions” about fluoride, said Dr. Lisa Simon, an author of the study and internal medicine physician at Mass General Brigham in Boston.
She and a colleague analyzed data on 8,484 children, from birth through age 19, from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. NHANES is conducted every year by the CDC and includes interviews about what people eat and extensive details about their blood work, doctor’s exams — and dental visits.
The team created a model to predict what could happen under two scenarios: if every public water system had optimal fluoride levels, and if there is a total national ban on fluoride in water systems.