Fluoridating water does not lower IQ: Otago research
New University of Otago research out of the world-renowned Dunedin Multidisciplinary Study does not support claims that
fluoridating water adversely affects children’s mental development and adult IQ.
The researchers were testing the contentious claim that exposure to levels of fluoride used in community water
fluoridation is toxic to the developing brain and can cause IQ deficits. Their findings are newly published in the
highly respected American Journal of Public Health.
The Dunedin Study has followed nearly all aspects of the health and development of around 1000 people born in Dunedin in
1972-1973 up to age 38.
Lead author Dr Jonathan Broadbent says the new research focused on Study members’ fluoride exposure during the first
five years of their lives, as this is a critical period in brain development, after which IQ is known to be relatively
stable.
Dr Broadbent and colleagues compared IQs of Study members who grew up in Dunedin suburbs with and without fluoridated
water. Use of fluoride toothpaste and tablets was also taken into account.
They examined average IQ scores between the ages of 7-13 years and at age 38, as well as subtest scores for verbal
comprehension, perceptual reasoning, working memory and processing speed. Data on IQ were available for 992 and 942
study members in childhood and adulthood, respectively.
Dr Broadbent says the team controlled for childhood factors associated with IQ variation, such as socio-economic status
of parents, birth weight and breastfeeding, and secondary and tertiary educational achievement, which is associated with
adult IQ.
“Our analysis showed no significant differences in IQ by fluoride exposure, even before controlling for the other
factors that might influence scores. In line with other studies, we found breastfeeding was associated with higher child
IQ, and this was regardless of whether children grew up in fluoridated or non-fluoridated areas.”
Dr Broadbent says that studies that fluoridation opponents say show that fluoride in water can cause IQ deficits, and
which they heavily relied on in city council submissions and hearings, have been reviewed and found to have used poor
research methodology and have a high risk of bias.
“In comparison, the Dunedin Multidisciplinary Study is world-renowned for the quality of its data and rigour of its
analysis,” he says.
“Our findings will hopefully help to put another nail in the coffin of the complete canard that fluoridating water is
somehow harmful to children’s development. In reality, the total opposite is true, as it helps reduce the tooth decay
blighting the childhood of far too many New Zealanders.”
This work was supported by the New Zealand Ministry of Education, the New Zealand Department of Health, the New Zealand
National Children’s Health Research Foundation, US National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research Grant R01
DE-015260-01A1, UK Medical Research Council Grant MR/K00381X/1, US National Institute on Aging Grant AG032282, and a
programme grant from the Health Research Council (HRC) of New Zealand. The Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and
Development Research Unit is supported by the HRC.
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