Statewide fluoride ban for tap water passes in Florida

(miamiherald.com)

34 points | by geox 10 hours ago ago

86 comments

  • delichon 9 hours ago ago

    Put another way, Florida supports the right of informed consent with regard to fluoride treatment. As a thyroid cancer survivor I decline that treatment due to fluoride competing with iodine for receptors and causing goiters and tumors as a result. The only reason I can decline is that I'm using well water rather than a public system. Now people in Florida can all choose. I'm pro choice on abortion too for the same reason: Your body your choice.

    • spauka 8 hours ago ago

      Without comment on the question of health benefits or harms, I'm curious whether you've had the well water you use tested. Fluoride concentrations in bore-well water varies quite widely, and concentrations higher than fluoridated tap water not uncommon. There are several areas here (in Aus) where fluoride is removed to reach the recommended concentration of 0.5-1.1 ppm. This obviously varies based on location.

    • hnthrow90348765 9 hours ago ago

      What are the options for adding fluoride back to water for a home?

      • amazingamazing 9 hours ago ago

        why would you want this? brush your teeth or swish with high concentration fluoride mouthwash. there's actually no benefit of ingesting fluoridated water. any benefit is simply incidental since it must touch your teeth down the hatch. don't take my word for it - go read the papers yourself, they all say as much. Or to put it another way, would pumping fluoride to your stomach help your teeth? I hope you know the answer.

        literally every toothpaste in the united states explicitly says to spit, not swallow. there's a reason for that.

        • status_quo69 8 hours ago ago

          https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2925001/

          Not everyone has impeccable brushing habits and reducing cavities is a net benefit to public health like sanitation departments. I would be more interested to see a source as to why you think there's no benefit to fluorinated water when there are studies that are a quick search away for fluorinated water.

          • amazingamazing 8 hours ago ago

            > reducing cavities is a net benefit to public health like sanitation departments

            what is the connection between reducing cavities and sanitation departments? cavities are not communicable.

            Also, the paper you linked is my point. there's no actual benefit of ingestion. the effect is purely incidental. it's more effective to apply fluoride to the teeth. nowhere does it actually explain that drinking it is what is beneficial. the difference in the incidence of caries is because by fluoridating the water it obviously will touch teeth, which has well known positive effects.

            the main conclusion of the paper is what everyone should hopefully know already - brush your teeth regularly with fluoride toothpaste.

            out of curiosity, would you be OK with vitamins being added to the water? most people are deficient in many.

            • pjc50 8 hours ago ago

              > would you be OK with vitamins being added to the water?

              Provided there's reasonable scientific evidence that this is fine and effective and not expensive, I don't see why not. I don't think I've ever seen it proposed.

              • amazingamazing 8 hours ago ago

                that is good to know. fundamentally we'll have to agree to disagree. I do not agree with experimentation with the populace's water supply as a matter of principal. fyi there's already plenty of evidence that supplements are useful for those that are sufficient. of course the main counter argument is that if you're eating a balanced diet supplements are unnecessary (which is true). though that's just about as helpful as saying water fluoridation is unnecessary because you can brush your teeth (which is also true).

                • jjeaff 37 minutes ago ago

                  if the natural water supply has fluoride in it, wouldn't removing the fluoride be akin to "experimenting" with the populace?

                • ndsipa_pomu 7 hours ago ago

                  Whilst I can see your point of view, I think that fluoride in water is an issue that provoked knee-jerk reactions.

                  Here in the UK, there's areas with and without fluoridisation - the reason being that naturally the water in different areas has different fluoride concentrations with some areas having no need for adding fluoride as it's already there. The benefits were very easy to determine as (presumably) cavities were more common in those areas with low fluoride content, so it's less about experimentation and more about ensuring that more people can gain the same benefit.

            • dkkergoog 4 hours ago ago

              [dead]

        • hnthrow90348765 8 hours ago ago

          Narrarator: "There wasn't a choice after all"

    • cantrecallmypwd 7 hours ago ago

      “It's incredibly obvious, isn't it? A foreign substance is introduced into our precious bodily fluids, without the knowledge of the individual, certainly without any choice. That's the way your hard-core Commie works.”

    • 1oooqooq 8 hours ago ago

      it probably don't make a big difference even in your case.

      in the water system quantities and peer reviewed studies dosages, the psychological impacts are more real than iodine absorption.

      flouride is not added today for teeth health (distributing mouth wash would do a better job) but it helps keep the water good for drinking, together with stuff like chlorine, which change by region.

      ... the real reason here is: it's as divisive and harder to reach an informed conclusion either way, just like abortion. oh American politics.

    • iluvcommunism 9 hours ago ago

      [dead]

  • jemmyw 9 hours ago ago

    Adding fluoride to water is a strange topic people get very worked up about. The levels of added fluoride are very low, it's been well studied at this point. Some places in the world need to filter out naturally occurring fluoride, which is one of the reasons that not everywhere adds it.

    In NZ we appear to be moving in the opposite direction where central govt is now going to mandate the addition of fluoride where it was previously a local decision.

    • dagw 9 hours ago ago

      The levels of added fluoride are very low, it's been well studied at this point.

      If you want to steel man the argument you should point out that the maximum allowed fluoride levels in US are quite a bit higher than in, for example the EU (on the order of 3 times higher), and that some recent studies have indicated some potential health risks for young children who consume a lot of water around the very top end of what the US allows.

      Of course the correct response to this is to overhaul the recommendations and lower the maximum allowed levels, not to issue state wide bans.

      • kelipso 9 hours ago ago

        Bans are more effective. There’s always some local hero in the water supply org who thinks he knows what’s best for everyone and modifies the fluoride amount to his liking. For example there was someone in Virginia a few years ago who lowered the fluoride to sensible levels and was fired for it.

        • jjeaff 42 minutes ago ago

          set a maximum limit. make it a crime (probably is already) to purposely exceed those limits.

          • kelipso 9 minutes ago ago

            Sure, my point being if there is no mechanism for adding fluoride to the water system, then it will be more much unlikely that someone will add illegal amount of the toxin to the water system.

    • pjc50 9 hours ago ago

      > Adding fluoride to water is a strange topic people get very worked up about

      Yes. It's weird, it seems to be given a special level of paranoia. And it's a longstanding one, the paranoid general in Dr Strangelove was obsessed with fluoridation.

      Lots of substances have arguments over safe legal levels, with varying levels of scientific evidence. This seems to have a crusade, and I wonder who started it.

    • amazingamazing 8 hours ago ago

      would you agree with a multivitamin being dissolved and added to the water? why or why not?

      • jjeaff 40 minutes ago ago

        that would be great. maybe some electrolytes too.

        • AStonesThrow 24 minutes ago ago

          While we're at it, I think my city could benefit from a subtle strawberry flavoring. Perhaps strawberry-banana would suit us best. The only question would be, aspartame or HFCS?

      • ndsipa_pomu 7 hours ago ago

        If some areas had sufficient levels of that multivitamin in the water naturally and it produced a benefit, then it would make sense to add similar levels of that multivitamin to the water supplies that lacked it.

    • cempaka 9 hours ago ago

      The recent NIH meta-study indicated there may be neurotoxic effects at concentrations within an order of magnitude of the recommended drinking water level (perhaps even at just 2x the recommendation), I wouldn't call that "very low".

      https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6923889/

  • glimshe 10 hours ago ago

    If I was a dentist, I'd be moving to Florida...

  • Etheryte 10 hours ago ago

    Before you jump to reactions, remember that there isn't consensus worldwide on what the best approach to this is. For example most countries in the EU also don't fluorinate water, but it's instead in toothpaste or table salt or etc.

    • undefined 9 hours ago ago
      [deleted]
    • IAmBroom 10 hours ago ago

      [flagged]

      • Etheryte 9 hours ago ago

        That last sentence doesn't say anything about America, you might want to consider what makes you so touchy on this subject.

      • messe 9 hours ago ago

        > There isn't a worldwide consensus on genital mutilation and slavery

        Oh come the fuck on. There's a pretty fucking large gap between water fluoridation and both of those.

        • gwervc 9 hours ago ago

          Yes but one of them is still performed at large scale in the US despite all common sense and scientific knowledge.

          • jcranmer 9 hours ago ago

            This bill is likely based on the same sort of scientific knowledge that leads people to recommend drinking raw milk. The litmus test to use is if it is banning fluoridation, or if it is reducing the maximum allowable amount of fluoride in the water to something below 0.75 mg/L (the current EPA limit is 4 mg/L).

            I haven't been able to find the bill text here, but I am virtually certain that it's the former case, which tells me that they're not actually motivated by the supposed harms of fluoride in the >0.75 mg/L range.

          • treetalker 9 hours ago ago

            It (circumcision) also pretty clearly unconstitutional and otherwise unlawful.

            Yahweh and Allah sadly didn't mandate fluoridation when revealing their will for mankind through their prophets. But somehow genital mutilation survives in the US in no small part because of religion.

  • os2warpman 9 hours ago ago

    "Forced medication" I assure you that they'll be banning iodine in salt and vitamin d in milk next.

    • conover 9 hours ago ago

      To play devil’s advocate, salt and milk aren’t pumped into your house by the government. You can also buy iodine-free salt and vitamin d-free milk if you choose.

      • roxolotl 9 hours ago ago

        You can buy bottled water, or a filter and many people have wells.

        • amazingamazing 9 hours ago ago

          the default should be no additions, no?

          • RajT88 9 hours ago ago

            No. Unless you want the US added to the list of countries where the advice to tourists is "Don't drink the water".

            Water additives are proven to improve the health of the populace. There are corner cases, and we can debate appropriate levels, but an outright ban of all additives is regressive.

            There seems to be a lot of regressive attitudes going around these days. See: Measles outbreak.

            • amazingamazing 9 hours ago ago

              water additives are used to remove bad things in the water. so in effect the additives exist to actually move the water qualify closer to the "default", not "enhance" it. if tap water was literally h20 and nothing else the additives would be unnecessary, no?

              as far as measles go, people have the right to not get vaccinated if they choose - it's dumb, though and others have the right to not let them participate in things since they're not vaccinated, too. it's not really analogous to the fluoride thing at all anyway.

              • yakz 8 hours ago ago

                > if tap water was literally h20 and nothing else the additives would be unnecessary, no?

                Pure water is not particularly healthy to drink, and may be bad for your plumbing.

              • RajT88 8 hours ago ago

                Default water, lol. What an incredibly, terribly, dumb argument. There is no such thing as "Default Water" - it neither exists in nature, nor in man-made systems. Good luck with that. We can - and should - modify our our systems in the interests of public health. Nothing comes without corner cases which impact people like you - them's the breaks. Life isn't fair, but we are engineering a society for the benefit of almost everyone in it.

                People can choose not to drink flouridated tap water if they want - building a well isn't that expensive, although you will probably need a treatment system because of the naturally occurring stuff (minerals, hydrogen sulphide, possibly excess flouride and other stuff).

                "Freedom isn't free", as they like to say. You may have to invest in your "freedom" to drink the water you want to drink. You will have to pay the price of your kids not getting vaccinated - they may not be able to go to public schools.

                There are much bigger hills worth dying on (see: Flint, MI). Leave the wildly successful public health programs alone.

                • amazingamazing 8 hours ago ago

                  > People can choose not to drink flouridated tap water if they want - building a well isn't that expensive, although you will probably need a treatment system because of the naturally occurring stuff (minerals, hydrogen sulphide, possibly excess flouride and other stuff).

                  that's hilarious because brushing your teeth is more effective, and cheaper than adding fluoride to water. I'm sure people in Manhattan will really get on building those wells.

                  at the end of the day there's not a single paper that actually says ingesting fluoride is water. they all correlate incidental fluoride contact on the teeth, due to it being in the water.

                  fact is, brushing your teeth is more effective and has no downsides. ingesting fluoride is bad and is discouraged literally not only by all dentists, but this fact is present on all toothpaste in the usa.

                  • ndsipa_pomu 7 hours ago ago

                    Despite people knowing about the effectiveness of brushing teeth with fluoride toothpaste, there are benefits (less cavities in young people) to having a certain level of fluoride in the water. Presumably, not everyone is good at brushing their teeth, yet we can improve dental health by adding in some fluoride in those areas that have low or no fluoride naturally in their water supply.

                  • RajT88 8 hours ago ago

                    Thank you for demonstrating that you don't understand how public health programs work.

                    • amazingamazing 8 hours ago ago

                      thank you for proving that ingesting fluoride has any actual benefit. a superior public health program would be to simply send toothpaste and a toothbrush to anyone who requests free of charge as topical application is more effective and there's literal consensus on this, unlike fluoridated water.

                      (ironically, I bet you don't swallow the water after you brush your teeth. deep down you know it's bad for ya).

                      • RajT88 8 hours ago ago

                        More bad faith talking points - which have been addressed by other commenters in other sub-threads responding to you. (I am able to read those, you know)

                        This is a dead horse. You're in the wrong. Please do not engage with me any more.

                        • ifyoubuildit 6 hours ago ago

                          > Default water, lol. What an incredibly, terribly, dumb argument.

                          > More bad faith talking points

                          Do you talk to people like this in person? If not, why not? (If so, how's that working out for you?)

                          • RajT88 2 hours ago ago

                            Hello, Pro-RFK policy guy!

                            I see you're taking a play from the right-wing playbook: If you can't refute a thing you want to refute, complain about decorum instead.

                        • amazingamazing 8 hours ago ago

                          they haven't though. feel free to post a paper showing that fluoride ingestion is good for you. there's no dispute that fluoride contact on the teeth is good.

                          there are plenty of papers showing that *ingestion* may be bad for you and results in lower IQ. feel free to research.

                          https://ntp.niehs.nih.gov/research/assessments/noncancer/com...

            • k12sosse 8 hours ago ago

              [flagged]

          • supportengineer 4 hours ago ago

            If we had universal health care and guaranteed basic income, then I might be inclined to agree with you.

            Fluoride in drinking water is supposed to be a cost-effective way to prevent a lot of suffering from those who cannot afford to take care of their teeth, for example, children in poor families.

            I grew up in an area with fluoride in the water and most of my peers had no cavities until we had moved away and were in our late twenties.

          • UncleMeat 9 hours ago ago

            The default for salt and milk isn't no additions.

            • amazingamazing 9 hours ago ago

              salt and milk don't come out of your tap, though. would you agree with governments building giant towers everywhere resulting in humidifying the air with chemically infused mists (which are said to be beneficial)?

              after all, if you prefer the current air, you can wear a breathing mask attached to a tank with your air of choice.

              it's crazy to me that people can see what harm the government can do in 2025 and still think the government knows best.

              • roxolotl 8 hours ago ago

                It's not about thinking the government knows best it's about thinking the research knows best. Fluoride in water is widely considered one of the largest public health victories and study after study finds it largely safe and worth the potential trade offs.

                The thing that's so wild about being anti fluoride is it's been going on for so long, it's possible your grandparents have never drank unfluoridated water at least in their adult lives, and at such scale that even if everything was a coordinated lie there would be very clear numbers showing problems.

                • amazingamazing 8 hours ago ago

                  > if everything was a coordinated lie there would be very clear numbers showing problems

                  that's not how science works though. people in the western hemisphere are becoming more unhealthy, and there is definitely not a consensus that fluoridated water is good. there are plenty of papers showing both conclusions.

                  at the end of the day though, there's actually no benefit to fluoride ingestion. no paper has shown this. what they do show though, is that when you add it to the water people have better tooth health, because the fluoride touches your teeth. however brushing your teeth is even more effective.

                  so can I assume that if there was research that breathing some chemically infused mist is good for you, you'd support the government in creating towers to spray this mist across the country? after all in this premise the research says it's good.

                  • roxolotl 7 hours ago ago

                    Sure why wouldn’t I? We do it already with things that aren’t healthy all the time. If we could, let’s say alleviate all allergies, with only very minor impacts to the environment or human health why wouldn’t we.

                    That being said it’s a false equalavincy. You can’t avoid the air you can avoid the public water supply.

                    • amazingamazing 6 hours ago ago

                      > You can’t avoid the air you can avoid the public water supply.

                      You can't though in practice. If you live in urban area for example. It's functionally equivalent. If you say well, I could say gas mask with tank. If you say bottled water, I could say respirator, etc.

                      • roxolotl 3 hours ago ago

                        Ok fair. Let’s turn it around then. Why wouldn’t you want something which drastically reduces allergies and is provably safe to humans and the environment? Is there any level of proof you’d be willing to accept? Do you just fundamentally believe that societal benefits aren’t worth it if they are impossible to opt out of? Or maybe you don’t see the societal benefits?

              • joshstrange 8 hours ago ago

                > salt and milk don't come out of your tap

                I do not see how this matters at all. The government regulates it, how it gets to your house makes little difference. Also, I don’t pay “the government” for my water/electric/etc, I pay companies which makes your argument even more confusing, it all comes down to regulations.

                • amazingamazing 8 hours ago ago

                  the default water people consume comes from the tap. you don't see how it's different? it's not like people buy water of their choice and hook it up to their plumbing.

              • UncleMeat 8 hours ago ago

                Okay. But that's not at all present in the post I responded to.

                This is government action we are discussing right now. The government can't know best when it puts fluoride in the water but it can know best when it bans municipalities from doing so?

                • amazingamazing 8 hours ago ago

                  > This is government action we are discussing right now. The government can't know best when it puts fluoride in the water but it can know best when it bans municipalities from doing so?

                  I don't agree with the ban. people should be about to vote on this.

  • ifyoubuildit 6 hours ago ago

    The reflexive, shallow negativity in these comment sections surprises me.

    There are legitimately bad things happening.

    Your complaints about those things become diluted when you complain about things like this (or looking for environmental causes of autism, or shutting down demonstrably wasteful programs).

    Sometimes the liberal side of these discussions can be so conservative.

  • peterpost2 10 hours ago ago

    Christ, wth is going on in the US.

    • vault 10 hours ago ago

      I don't think this is, among the recent posts about US, the one for which you should have such a reaction... but maybe I'm missing something important here.

    • Loughla 10 hours ago ago

      Do European countries use fluoride in their water?

      While I agree that it's a shit show right now in the US, this article maybe isn't the leading edge of that.

      • dagw 9 hours ago ago

        Do European countries use fluoride in their water?

        Varies a lot from country to country, but over all it is done to a much lower degree than in the US.

        However the big difference is that there isn't a ban on it. There are scientific guidelines published by the EU and then it is up to each country/state to decide if they want to add it or not based on local considerations.

      • stop50 9 hours ago ago

        In Germany: no The toothpaste has already enough fluoride and the healthcare system isn't completly broken.

    • IAmBroom 10 hours ago ago

      Thread over.

  • amazingamazing 9 hours ago ago

    repeat after me:

    topical fluoride application on the teeth is better than drinking fluoridated water.

    we're in a post truth era where literal fact is downvoted lol.

  • codedokode 10 hours ago ago

    [flagged]

    • jcranmer 10 hours ago ago

      The chief chemical added to tap water is chlorine, to kill off all of the organisms that live in the water. Clostridium difficile isn't exactly something you want to get with your drinking water, unless you really, really love your diarrhea.

      • nancyminusone 8 hours ago ago

        After a few years on a well, it becomes clear how much chlorine. Opening a tap on tap water smells like a swimming pool. You can smell it clear across the room.

        Not that it means it's unsafe to drink

        • orwin 8 hours ago ago

          Not unsafe, but still, if your water smell chlorine, you should let it rest a bit before drinking it.

    • dagw 9 hours ago ago

      Drinking tap water without chemicals added to them sounds a lot more scary.

    • izzydata 9 hours ago ago

      Everything is chemicals.

    • paulcole 10 hours ago ago

      That’s right.

      My grandma won’t get on a plane because being strapped into a metal tube going 500mph at 35,000 feet in the sky sounds scary.

    • mcphage 9 hours ago ago

      It’s a good thing that water isn’t a chemical.

  • esbranson 2 hours ago ago

    Poor people don't drink tap water, due to lack of trust in the media among others.[1] The comments here that insinuate otherwise is also an effect of that same media,[2] on the same spectrum that led them to support school closures.

    This whole topic is just a symptom of a more general disease. Defund CPB (and hence PBS and NPR) before we lose any more to this idiocy.

    [1] https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7474465/

    [2] https://www.nytimes.com/2000/05/26/us/epidemic-of-oral-disea...