Recognising the link between poor dental health,
social deprivation and the lack of a fluoridated water supply, we jointly call
upon the Government, local authorities and the water industry to take action to
ensure that fluoridation is introduced wherever it is practicable to do so and
wherever there is a demonstrable health need.
- British Dental Association
- British Medical Association
- British Fluoridation Society
- NHS Confederation
- Action and Information on Sugars
- Association of Directors of Public Health Medicine
- Association for Public Health
- British Association for the Study of Community Dentistry
- British Association for Community Child Health
- British Dental Health Foundation
- British Dental Hygienists Association
- British Dietetic Association
- British Society of Dentistry for the Handicapped
- British Society of Gerodontology
- British Society for Paediatric Dentistry
- Faculty of Dental Surgery of the Royal College of Surgeons of England
- Faculty of General Dental Practitioners (UK) of the Royal College of
Surgeons of England
- Faculty of Public Health Medicine of the Royal College of Physicians of the
United Kingdom
- FDI World Dental Federation
- Health Education Authority
- Health Promotion Wales
- Help The Aged
- Institute of Health Education
- MENCAP
- National Dental Health Education Group
- NHS Consultants Association
- Oral Health Promotion Research Group
- Public Health Alliance
- Scottish Association for Community Child Health
- Socialist Health Association
- The Patients Association
- The Royal Society of Health
- Unison Health Care
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CAMPAIGN LAUNCH
The campaign was launched by Kevin Barron MP at a packed meeting at the
House of Commons on 4 November 1996. The British Dental Association issued a
News Release and Parliamentary briefing, and the following 4 reports
were published:
Report of Symposium
Campaign Calling for Action on Water Fluoridation - One Year On
MONDAY 3 NOVEMBER 1997 3.30PM - 5PM Grand Committee Room, House of Commons
One hundred and fifty people, including at least 20 MPs, attended a packed
meeting at the House of Commons on Monday 3 November 1997 to mark the first
anniversary of the Campaign Calling for Action on Water Fluoridation. The aim
of the campaign is to achieve action by Government to ensure that the 1985
Water (Fluoridation) Act works in the way that Parliament intended - that is
that water suppliers fluoridate supplies when asked to do so by health
authorities.
The meeting was jointly sponsored by Kevin Barron MP and Richard Burden MP,
and was organised by the British Fluoridation Society and the British Dental
Association on behalf of the National Alliance for Equity in Dental Health, an
impressive alliance of 33 national organisations ranging from BFS and the BDA
through BASCD, the British Medical Association, the Public Health Alliance,
MENCAP, the Patients Association, and Unison Health Care.
The meeting was Chaired by BFS Chairman Mike Lennon, and excellent short
presentations were given by:
- Kevin Barron MP, Chairman of the Labour Backbench Health Committee, who
restated his own strong personal support for water fluoridation, and expressed
the view that Parliament intended decisions about fluoridation to be taken by
health authorities, not water suppliers, and that a badly drafted clause in the
Act had since prevented this;
- Tom Brake MP (standing in at short notice for Simon Hughes MP, Liberal
Democrat Spokesman on Health, who had to make a statement to the House). Mr
Brake expressed his strong personal support for fluoridation, and regret that
he had not been exposed to fluoridated water as a child. He was confident that,
given the high level of support for the measure, the current campaign would be
successful in extending fluoridation to those areas most in need;
- John Hunt, Chief Executive of the British Dental Association, who reported
the latest results of the BDAs survey of MPs views on water
fluoridation, which shows that 70% of MPs support fluoridation;
- Nigel Hawkes, Science Editor of The Times, who discussed public perception
of Risk, and in particular the role of the media in communicating Risk. Mr
Hawkes concluded that nowadays risks are fewer, but more feared, and that it
was a mistake to blame the media for the publics perception of risk -
except where the media has used blatant lies;
- Richard Burden MP who spoke about the politics of the introduction of
fluoridation in the West Midlands;
- Tony Jenner, Regional Dental Adviser to the North West NHS Executive, who
launched the new BFS briefing Dental health inequalities in the United
Kingdom); and
- Professor Phil Holloway, Emeritus Professor of Childrens Dentistry,
University of Manchester, who launched the new BFS briefing Dental fluorosis in
perspective.
Following a lively debate which included serious public health issues
relating to water fluoridation, and the National Pure Water Associations
latest conspiracy theory about a link between fluoride and the atomic bomb, the
meeting was closed by BFS President Baroness Fisher.
Lady Fisher concluded with an impassioned pledge that the campaign calling
for action on water fluoridation to end dental health inequalities will
continue as long as the children of Manchester, Glasgow, Belfast, and Inner
London are denied the benefits of water fluoridation which the children of
Birmingham have enjoyed for over 30 years.
E-mail requests for copies of the two new British Fluoridation Society
briefings to: bfs@liv.ac.uk
BFS
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