New ADA Recommendation: Parents Should Use Fluoride Toothpaste on 12-Month-Olds

teethThe Daily Sheeple – by Melissa Melton

The American Dental Association (ADA) has updated its guidelines on fluoride toothpaste for tiny kids, now recommending that a rice-sized amount be used on the gums of children as young as 12-to-14 months old:

According to the American Dental Association, preventing tooth decay can start a lot earlier than previously recommended. Old guidelines advised parents to wait until their children turned two before introducing them to fluoride toothpaste. Now, the association has recommended all parents to start using fluoride toothpaste on children younger than two.  

The updated guidelines stated that it is safe to use a rice-grain sized amount of fluoride toothpaste for young toddlers starting at 12 to 14-months. Parents should only apply a smear of the toothpaste and teach their children to remember to always spit out excess paste when they are brushing their teeth. For children aged three to six, parents can start to use more toothpaste in the size of a pea-blob. The association reminded parents that children should learn to brush their teeth twice a day.

Fluoride has been shown in studies to cause a multitude of negative health effects, including fertility issues, cancer, cardiovascular disease, endocrine disruption, neurotoxic effects, pineal gland and gastrointestinal issues, among others. Fluoride was even once prescribed in Europe as a drug that reduced thyroid activity.

Children in America are already being exposed to large amounts of fluoride as it is through widespread fluoridated water consumption, on top of the fact that in many cases that same fluoridated water is used to grow a lot of the nation’s produce. The majority of fluoride added to water supplies in this country is a byproduct of the phosphate fertilizer industry.

In addition, fluoride-based pesticides are also sprayed on our food supply. We’re also one of the only nations, along with Australia, that allows a fumigant called sulfuryl fluoride (which breaks down into inorganic fluoride) to be applied to certain foods after they have been harvested. Another fluoride-based pesticide, cryolite, is also applied to many crops in this country as well. Most people, including children, are exposed to this through eating green grapes, as cryolite is widely used in many U.S. vineyards.

We are continuously reassured by officials that fluoridating water supplies helps fight cavities. According to the Fluoride Action Network (FAN), more people drink fluoridated water in this country than in the rest of the world combined, yet there is no significant difference in tooth decay between nations that fluoridate water and nations that don’t. Because it’s added directly to the water, there’s no way to tell how much of a “dose” a child is getting through drinking/cooking water when added to all the other sources in a child’s daily life.

Far and away, however, the largest dose of fluoride the average child gets in this country comes from toothpaste. Unfortunately, many children end up swallowing toothpaste when they are young and learning to brush, ingesting dangerously high levels according to FAN:

  • Use of fluoride toothpaste during childhood is a major risk factor for dental fluorosis, particularly for children who brush before the age of three and who live in areas with fluoridated water.
  • Children who swallow fluoride toothpaste can reach fluoride levels in their blood that exceed the levels that have been found to inhibit insulin secretion and increase blood glucose in animals and humans.
  • All fluoride toothpastes sold in the U.S. must now include a poison label that warns users to “contact a poison control center immediately” if they swallow more than used for brushing.
  • Just one 1 gram of fluoride toothpaste (a full strip of paste on a regular-sized brush) is sufficient to cause acute fluoride toxicity in two-year old child (e.g., nausea, vomiting, headache, diarrhea).
  • In 2009, U.S. poison control centers received over 25,000 calls  related to excessive ingestion of fluoride toothpaste, with over 378 users requiring emergency room treatment.

The article quoted at the beginning of this article goes on to say that experts claim using small amounts of fluoride on teeth will reduce the chances of children developing fluorosis.

It’s kind of a twisting of words, isn’t it? Fluorosis is the discoloration and pitting damage that occurs to bone when it comes in contact with excessive fluoride; thus, using no fluoride at all will also reduce the chances of developing fluorosis.

Now the ADA says all parents should use fluoridated toothpaste on children under two, and begin with one-year-olds. How a baby who might not even have teeth or be able to walk will be able to even remotely comprehend the directions to spit and not swallow this potentially dangerous chemical was not explained.

 

Delivered by The Daily Sheeple


Contributed by Melissa Melton of The Daily Sheeple.

Melissa Melton is a writer, researcher, and analyst for The Daily Sheeple and a co-creator of Truthstream Media. Wake the flock up!

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2 thoughts on “New ADA Recommendation: Parents Should Use Fluoride Toothpaste on 12-Month-Olds

  1. The problem is untreated tooth decay. So toddlers need dentists not fluoride. 80% of dentists refuse Medicaid patients, 130 million Americans don’t have dental insurance. Many with insurance can’t afford dentistry high out of pocket expenses. Organized dentistry wants you to believe that a sliver of fluoride will fix everything. Yeah, right!

    Dentists want to hold on to their lucrative monopoly and constantly lobby against any other viable alternatives e.g. dental therapists.

    80% of all tooth decay occurs in 20% of the population – usually the lowest incomed who dentists refused to treat.

    No scientific evidence exists showing that decay-prone toddlers are
    fluoride-deficient. But there’s much evidence showing American children are
    fluoride-overdosed. So,we are (not-really) shocked that the ADA is advocating for more fluoride use, and at a younger age, which seems to boost profits for fluoride toothpaste makers; but does not protect America’s most vulnerable to fluoride’s toxic effects.

    The new epidemic of dental fluorosis (fluoride discolored teeth) is the
    reason government, health and dental groups now advise that

    1) infant formula should not be routinely mixed with fluoridated water (http://www.FormulaFluoride.Webs.com)
    All infant formula already contains some fluoride, whether concentrated,
    ready-to-feed or organic.

    2) recommended “optimal” amount of fluoride in public water supplies be
    lowered (January 2011)

    3) dentists and pediatricians tally a child’s total fluoride intake from
    all sources before prescribing more – this is almost universally ignored.

    4) Only children at risk of decay should be administered fluoride – another
    virtually ignored fact.

    If the ADA’s interest was in protecting children instead of increasing
    profits for fluoride toothpaste manufacturers, they would have taken this
    opportunity to, inform parents of the above list and remind them to keep
    fluoridated toothpaste out of reach of children because it’s a poison and, if
    more than used for brushing, they need to call poison control. The ADA also
    could tell fluoride toothpaste manufacturers to stop selling candy-flavored
    fluoride-poisoned tubes of toothpaste so children can use it with the blessings
    of their uninformed parents, many in the privacy of a closed-bathroom
    door..

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