Buda voters to decide whether to reintroduce fluoride to tap water

Buda voters on Tuesday will decide whether the Central Texas city should again add fluoride to its water supply.

The widespread and decades-old practice of fluoridation — roughly two-thirds of Americans live in communities with fluoridated water supplies — is a federally recognized public health policy meant to curb tooth decay. But the strategy has courted increasingly vocal resistance in recent decades as some new scientific evidence indicates marginal benefits or even adverse human health impacts. 

Tap water in Buda had been fluoridated for years until residents in the neighboring city of San Marcos voted in 2015 to ban the practice. Buda — located in one of the fastest-growing counties in the U.S. — receives the majority of its water from San Marcos’ municipal water plant. 

The Buda City Council almost immediately sought to reintroduce the mineral additive to the city’s water supply with technical and financial assistance from a state fluoridation program. They began installing all the necessary equipment at the end of 2016. But earlier this year a group of citizens rallied against the policy, arguing that added fluoride could be harmful and even toxic to consume even though it meets standards set by the American Water Works Association and the National Sanitation Foundation.

Under pressure, the council voted in February to send the issue to voters.

“There’s not a good reason to put it in the water,” said Michael Meuth, a Buda resident and member of Buda Citizens for Safe Water.  

He said he decided to stop drinking Buda’s tap water several years ago after he researched the issue and decided that it could cause kidney, bone and thyroid problems. He said the naturally occurring fluoride in the water is enough.    

In general, fluoride is found in trace amounts in surface water sources such as rivers but falls below what the federal government considers the optimal level to prevent cavities — .07 milligrams per liter.  

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, as well as countless dental associations, say boosting fluoride levels in tap water is the most cost-effective, safe and beneficial method to ward off tooth decay, particularly for low-income populations who may not have access to dental care. 

U.S. cities and water authorities have been adding fluoride to drinking water for more than 70 years, according to the Centers for Disease Control. As of 2014, about 66 percent of Americans live in communities that fluoridate their water supplies.

The share of Texans who drink fluoridated water is higher than the national average — 72 percent — but the percentage has dropped several points in the past two years as some cities have ceased the practice, according to a spokesman for the Texas Department of State Health Services, which runs the Texas Fluoridation Program. The number of water systems in Texas that boost fluoride levels in their drinking water systems is down to 118 from nearly 200 almost four decades ago, said Chris Van Deusen. 

Although some states require cities to fluoridate water to meet the federal guideline, Texas leaves it up to cities and water authorities. 

Officials and experts say some Texas city councils have decided to stop fluoridating water supplies because they see it as a needless expense. 

That’s one reason why Evan Ture, who is running for a Buda City Council seat unopposed, said he doesn’t support the practice. 

“I don’t see it as a necessary cost to the city,” Ture said. “There are others things affecting our ability to prevent dental carries other than fluoridating our water.”

The design and installation of Buda’s proposed fluoridation system would cost nearly $52,000, according to a city report. (The state has already agreed to pay for the vast majority of it.) And a two-year supply of fluoride would cost about $9,000.

College Station, with a population of more than 100,000, saved more than $40,000 a year when it stopped fluoridating its water in 2011, according to the city’s website. 

But Delton Yarbrough, a dentist and the former chair of the Texas Dental Association’s community fluoride committee, said despite complaints about the costs, the health benefits of fluoridation make it worth it.

“They don’t understand the health care benefits of what they’re taking away,” he said of cities that have dropped the practice. “What we know as dentists is water fluoridation is the cheapest, most effective way to control dental [cavities] that is out there.”

Recent studies casting doubt on the benefits of fluoridation are “junk science,” he said. 

Every dollar invested in water fluoridation results in $38 of savings in dental care costs, Yarbrough added, citing a figure from the CDC.

A 2000 state study found there were “substantial savings in publicly financed dental care” through the Texas Medicaid program as a result of community water fluoridation.   

Beth Stewart, the executive director of the Texas Oral Health Coalition, a pro-fluoridation advocacy group, said the practice is particularly important because of benefits to low-income populations who may not be able to access or afford dental care.

While communities should not be mandated to fluoridate water, she said she hopes local officials note that the vast majority of health experts and dentists support the practice.

 “We want to be able to provide information so people can make a decision without fear or misinformation,” she said.  


Source: Texas Tribune Blue News

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