PRESS RELEASE
Confusion from Pro-Fluoride Group
In a press release last week, the head of pro-fluoride activist group Making Sense of Fluoride, Dan Ryan expressed
astonishment that the Royal Society of NZ once supported keeping leaded petrol; Ryan went as far as to deny it. His
confusion went further, showing he didn’t understand the difference between a discredited fluoride-IQ NZ study published
in 2014, the Lead-IQ study published last week and the Dunedin Longitudinal Study. Ryan also failed to mention the Harvard meta-analysis of 27 international
fluoride-IQ studies, published in the Lancet in 2012, which found a drop of 7 IQ points.
The Royal Society of New Zealand published a paper in 1985 concluding that "The emotive and controversial issue of lead was chosen deliberately, as the evidence strongly suggests
that lead in petrol does not pose a significant risk to human health" and that “the lead in petrol debate is therefore
artificial. It is based on emotive perception of a risk, which, when genuinely quantified is seen to be of a very low
order indeed”. Mary Byrne, National Coordinator for Fluoride Free NZ says, “Indeed, this sounds exactly like what they
say about fluoride now”.
The Dunedin Longitudinal Study, from which data was extracted for the Lead IQ study as well as the Fluoride IQ study, is
one of the most famous studies on human physiology and behaviour in the world. They are studying every aspect of the
lives of all 1,038 babies born in Dunedin in 1972, throughout their lives.
The new Lead and IQ study was published last week using childhood blood lead data from the Longitudinal Study. It states
that the study children who were exposed to high levels of lead in childhood have a 4 point IQ drop, accounting for
about half of the subjects in the Dunedin group.
Byrne says, “It’s astonishing that the lead-IQ drop of 4 points is making headlines, but the Harvard meta-analysis of
fluoride-IQ studies finding a drop of 7 IQ points has been ignored by the media and most of our health bureaucrats.
Meanwhile, fluoride is deliberately added to drinking water in New Zealand right now”.
Dunedin dentist, Jonathan Broadbent also used data from the Dunedin Longitudinal study for a NZ study on fluoridation
and IQ in 2014. His study was harshly criticised by international experts because it did not determine the fundamental
factor pertaining to the study: how much fluoride each child was consuming. Broadbent was later forced to admit that
half of the children in the non-fluoridated area were taking fluoride tablets, thereby making it impossible to
distinguish between the ‘fluoridated’ and ‘non-fluoridated’ groups. A total of 139 children were taking fluoride
tablets. He also omitted 11 confounding factors, and didn’t determine the total exposure of the children’s mothers
during pregnancy – a key factor according to leading research. There were 939 children in the fluoridated area and 99 in
the non-fluoridated area.
The two New Zealand IQ studies on lead and fluoride did use data from the same source, but they are different studies,
with different authors, comparing the different neurotoxins' relationship to IQ. "It's interesting that Broadbent's NZ
Fluoride-IQ study didn't account for blood lead level, even though the data was available to him. Excluding this
well-known confounding factor further discredits his study,” says Ms Byrne.
There are now a total of 51 human studies and 300 animal studies concluding fluoride causes damage to the brain.
Ryan‘s group would like to see fluoridation extended across the whole of New Zealand, and the decision made by the
Director of Health so that local groups could not influence decision makers. Fluoride Free New Zealand believe fluoride
ingestion should be an individual choice.
However, Ryan did agree with Byrne that the dangers of lead had been long-known while the Ministry of Health sat on its
hands and did nothing. Byrne says, “Fluoride is in the same position lead was when it should have been banned. Brain
development of New Zealand children is being put at risk while the Ministry of Health and groups like Making Nonsense of
Fluoride bury their heads in the sand and deny the science, just like with lead in petrol”.
ENDS