Water fluoridation expansion given green light
The biggest expansion of water fluoridation in England since the 1980s is to go ahead, officials have announced.
The Government estimates that the expansion of the water fluoridation programme across the North East will reach an additional 1.6 million people.
It is hoped that the scheme will reduce the number of tooth extractions due to decay, particularly in deprived areas.
Fluoride is a naturally occurring mineral found in water and some foods.
In the early 20th century, researchers found that people had less tooth decay in areas with higher fluoride levels in the drinking water.
Many areas have enough naturally occurring fluoride in drinking water.
In other parts of the country levels are manually adjusted as part of a fluoridation scheme.
UK schemes involving adding fluoride to water date back to the 1960s, starting in the Midlands.
[1/2] The #Gvt has announced plans to extend the current water fluoridation scheme in the North East to reach an extra 1.6m people.
Water fluoridation is the single most effective #PublicHealth measure for ⬇️tooth decay – the leading cause of 🏥admissions for 5-9 yr olds. pic.twitter.com/2fozrp7jao
— Association of Directors of Public Health (ADPH) (@ADPHUK) March 25, 2024
Around 10% of people in England currently have fluoride added to their drinking water, mostly in the West Midlands and the North East, including Newcastle and Gateshead.
The Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) confirmed that, following public consultation last year, the Government will press ahead with the expansion of community water fluoridation across the North East of England.
This will be the first significant expansion of water fluoridation in England since the 1980s.
Around half of the North East already has fluoridated water.
The consultation proposed that the programme should expand across the region to Darlington; Durham; Gateshead; Hartlepool; Middlesbrough; Newcastle; Northumberland; North Tyneside; Redcar and Cleveland; South Tyneside; Stockton and Sunderland.
'The findings of all health monitoring reports since 2014 consistently show that water fluoridation is an effective and safe public health measure to reduce the prevalence and severity of tooth decay and reduce dental health inequalities,' DHSC said in a statement.
A review examining the benefit of such schemes, which was published in October, concluded the benefits of fluoridating water supplies appear to have declined since the 1970s when fluoride toothpaste became widely available in the UK.
Overall, water fluoridation 'may lead to slightly more children being free of tooth decay' and 'may lead to slightly less tooth decay in children's baby teeth', according to the updated Cochrane Review.
The news comes as the Government launched its national supervised toothbrushing campaign across the most deprived areas of England.
Commenting, Eddie Crouch, chairman of the British Dental Association, said: 'Water fluoridation has been around since the Second World War.
'Supervised brushing since Victorian times.
'Tried and tested policies, but it shows we need real pace here.
'Building an NHS dental service fit for the future won't wait till the 22nd Century.'
Dr Urshla Devalia, spokeswoman for the British Society of Paediatric Dentistry, said: 'At last, we will see the dial shift on children's oral health in England.
'BSPD has been advocating for the importance of a preventative approach to address the crisis in children's oral health for years.
'Intervening now with a supervised toothbrushing scheme, plus community water fluoridation programmes, are initiatives proven to deliver beneficial oral health outcomes that will pay for themselves severalfold in the future.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Reeves announces £6 billion to provide millions of NHS tests and procedures
Rachel Reeves has announced a £6 billion investment to speed up tests and treatment within the NHS, after setting out huge year-on-year rises in the health service's budget. New scanners, ambulances and urgent treatment centres are among the things which the additional cash will pay for, with the aim of providing up to four million more tests and procedures over the next five years. The announcement comes after the Chancellor put NHS funding at the heart of her spending review on Wednesday, raising its budget in a move worth £29 billion a year. This comes, however, at the expense of other areas of public spending. The new £6 billion funding will help to meet the Government's target of reducing NHS waiting lists in England, the Chancellor claimed. 'Over a decade of underinvestment from the previous government put the NHS on its knees, with people across the country unable to get the care they need. We are investing in Britain's renewal, and we will turn that around,' Ms Reeves said. She added: 'Part of our record investment will deliver four million tests, scans and procedures, so hard-working people can get the healthcare they and their families need. 'There is no strong economy without a strong NHS, and we'll deliver on our Plan for Change to end the hospital backlog, improve living standards and get more money in people's pockets.' The latest spending commitment will help patients get access to diagnostic scans and treatment in places such as shopping centres and high streets, speeding up their diagnoses. The Government hopes this will help to cut NHS waiting lists, meeting Labour's goal of ensuring the health service carries out 92% of routine operations within 18 weeks. Health Secretary Wes Streeting said: 'Since taking office we have been relentless in our drive to cut waiting times for patients, delivering over 3.6 million extra elective care appointments and reducing the overall waiting list by over 200,000. 'The £6 billion investment we are announcing today will generate millions more vital diagnostic tests, scans and procedures for patients across the country.' On Wednesday evening, Ms Reeves said the Government was 'confident' it could meet its pledge to reduce waiting lists after giving the NHS a 3% annual increase in funding at the spending review. Some health leaders are, however, sceptical that the Government will meet its target, despite the funding boost provided at the spending review. Matthew Taylor, chief executive of the NHS Confederation, which represents all health organisations, warned 'difficult decisions will still need to be made as this additional £29 billion won't be enough to cover the increasing cost of new treatments, with staff pay likely to account for a large proportion of it'. He added: 'So, on its own, this won't guarantee that waiting time targets are met.' Sarah Woolnough, chief executive of the King's Fund charity, said: 'The Chancellor said she wants the public to have an NHS there when they need it. 'It is hard to see how all the things she mentions: faster ambulance times, more GP appointments, and adequate mental health services and more can be met on this settlement alone. 'Particularly when large parts of this additional funding will be absorbed by existing rising costs, such as the higher cost of medicines, which are currently being negotiated, and covering staff pay deals.'


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
RFK Jr. Picks Eight New Members of CDC Vaccine Panel
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced on X the names of eight new members of an expert panel that advises the federal government on vaccine policy. Kennedy removed all 17 former members of the panel on Monday.


TechCrunch
4 hours ago
- TechCrunch
US government's vaccine website defaced with AI-generated content
In Brief A U.S. government website designed to inform the public about vaccines has been defaced and now hosts apparently AI-generated spam. The domain, which belongs to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), appears to have been hosting the same kind of content — mostly gay-themed and LGBTQ+ posts — since at least May 12, according to an archived version of the site. It's unclear who is responsible for it, or what is the purpose of this defacement other than pushing AI-generated slop spam. Websites hosted on official U.S. government domains have been hijacked in the past to host scam ads and hacking services. 404 Media reported on Wednesday that the vaccines HHS website is part of a wider spam operation that includes websites owned by NPR, Nvidia, and Stanford University, all of which redirect to 'a nonsense SEO spam page,' as 404 Media journalist Sam Cole called it, hosted on HHS did not respond to TechCrunch's request for comment.