Fluoride and fear
By Justin Jackson, Medical Xpress
edited by Sadie Harley, reviewed
by Robert Egan
Children exposed to recommended levels of fluoride in
drinking water show modest cognitive advantages in secondary school, with no
clear evidence of harm to cognitive functioning around age 60, according to
researchers at the Institute for Social Research and Data Innovation at the
University of Minnesota and multiple collaborating institutions..webp)
Don't need no stinking fluoride!
Water fluoridation in the United States began after decades
of research linked naturally high levels of fluoride in water sources to lower
community tooth decay. The evidence was convincing enough for the city of Grand
Rapids, Michigan, to become the first in the world to supplement its municipal
water with fluoride in 1945.
While scientific consensus and public policy have considered
fluoridation a fundamentally positive public health intervention, discussion,
doubt, and conspiratorial fears have persisted in some public circles.
Some of the concerns revolve around safety for developing
children, specifically regarding whether fluoride exposure reduces childhood
IQ, with some selective scientific backing.
A previous meta-analysis that reported statistically significant inverse relationships between fluoride exposure and childhood IQ involved very poor rural populations in countries such as China, India, Mexico, and Iran and did not include US children or nationally representative samples. Findings at concentrations below 1.5 mg/liter were described as null, and concentrations above 1.5 mg/L were noted to exceed typical US exposures (around 0.7 mg/L).
A second meta-analysis was limited to studies in areas with fluoride concentrations equal to or below 1.5 mg/liter and reported no association between exposure to water fluoridation and lower IQ scores in children. Studies in that review also did not involve US children or nationally representative samples.
National cohort and typical US exposures
In the study, "Childhood
fluoride exposure and cognition across the life course," published
in Science Advances, researchers used nationally representative
longitudinal data to investigate how fluoride exposure from drinking water
during childhood relates to cognition in adolescence and around age 60.
Investigators used the High School and Beyond 1980 cohort, a
sample of sophomores and seniors attending 1,020 US high schools in 1980. A
subset of 26,820 individuals was followed through 2021. Analyses of adolescent
cognition included 57,960 students, and analyses of cognition at about age 60
included 13,260 participants.
Adolescent cognition was measured using 12th grade reading
comprehension, vocabulary, and mathematics scores. Cognitive functioning around
age 60 was measured using a global score derived from a hierarchical item
response theory model combining information from memory, fluency, and attention
measures.
Linking subject to water sources
Researchers linked high school geolocations to Fluoridation
Census records from 1967 through 1993, which reported whether and when
localities supplemented municipal water with fluoride. Additional information
came from US Geological Survey measurements of naturally occurring fluoride in
38,105 wells sampled between 1988 and 2017.
Exposure classification followed US Public Health Service
recommendations indicating levels between 0.7 and 1.2 mg/liter until 2015 and
0.7 mg/liter beginning in 2015.
Sample members were placed into three exposure groups. One
group lived in areas without municipal fluoridation and with naturally
occurring fluoride below 0.7 mg/liter at conception and at the time of
secondary school testing.
A second group lived in areas with municipal fluoridation or
naturally occurring fluoride at or above 0.7 mg/liter at both time points. A
third group lived in areas that implemented municipal fluoridation after
conception but before secondary school tests.
Small gains in adolescent cognition
Students who grew up with recommended fluoride levels in
their drinking water scored higher on secondary school tests of mathematics,
reading, and vocabulary than peers who never reached those levels. Researchers
describe these advantages as modest, about 7% of a standard deviation, and
report that the pattern is consistently positive and statistically
distinguishable from zero across all measures.
Analyses of global cognition around age 60 did not show
statistically significant links with fluoride exposure.
Testing alternative explanations
In a robustness check focused on students who had not
changed schools because of residential moves since the start of fifth grade.
Results for that group closely matched the patterns found in the full analytic
sample.
A second robustness check introduced an exposure category
for communities that began municipal water fluoridation shortly after
adolescent achievement tests were administered.
Analyses indicate that having stable community traits linked
to fluoridation adoption (such as local politics, resources, social conditions,
or investments in schools and health systems) is unlikely to be the reason
children in fluoridated areas scored higher, which supports the interpretation
that the association is connected to ingestion of fluoride, not types of
communities.
Interpreting benefits and limits
Findings cast doubt on any assertions that exposure to
recommended fluoride levels reduces academic achievement or cognitive
functioning as the results pointed, albeit less dramatically, in the opposite
direction. Fluoride exposure at levels routinely observed in the United States
is associated with cognitive benefits in adolescence and is not harmful to
cognitive functioning around age 60.
Study authors note that they were unable to infer from
observational data and available measures why fluoride exposure relates to
better adolescent academic achievement, only that it does.
Written for you by our author Justin
Jackson, edited by Sadie Harley, and fact-checked and reviewed by Robert Egan—this
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More information: John Robert Warren et al,
Childhood fluoride exposure and cognition across the life course, Science
Advances (2025). DOI:
10.1126/sciadv.adz0757
David A. Savitz, Evidence-based water fluoridation
policy, Science Advances (2025). DOI:
10.1126/sciadv.aed4503
Journal information: Science Advances