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Fluoridation seems like a “ no-brainer ”. Helps Americans keep their teeth (reduces cavities by up to 40%) Saves millions in treatment costs and eliminates pain and suffering Nearly every large city and more than 195 million Americans benefit
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Fluoridation seems like a “no-brainer” • Helps Americans keep their teeth (reduces cavities by up to 40%) • Saves millions in treatment costs and eliminates pain and suffering • Nearly every large city and more than 195 million Americans benefit • Is the most cost-efficient measure we can take to preserve oral health
A standard public health strategy Fluoridation is one of many public health strategies used in the U.S. • Adding iodine to table salt • Adding Vitamin D to milk • Adding chlorine to drinking water and swimming pools • Adding folic acid to breads and cereals
Supported by all major health groups • Institute of Medicine • American Public Health Association • National Consumers League • Council of State Governments • American Society for Clinical Nutrition • Florida Department of Elder Affairs • The Linus Pauling Institute • American Academy of Pediatrics • American Dental Association • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention • American Academy of Family Physicians • American Medical Association • American Academy of Physician Assistants • U.S. Task Force on Community Preventive Services • American Association for the Advancement of Science • World Health Organization • Office of Health Affairs, U.S. Department of Defense • American Academy of Public Health Dentistry The CDC has named fluoridation one of “10 great public health achievements of the 20th century”
1. Well-organized opponents Activate a National Network Aggressively Use the Web Spin the Science Add Credible Partners
2. We forgot what a difference it made Support among younger people Support among older people Most people support community water fluoridation. But younger people – born after fluoridation was commonplace – are less supportive than their older counterparts.
3. How the issue is framed • Main frame: Debate. • 4 of 5 front-page stories focused on debate over fluoridation safety. • Toxicity, danger and cancer are most frequent “anti” arguments • One-note pro-argument: Fluoridation good for your teeth
4. The impact of the internet “I was looking through the stories trying to figure out what to read and at the top they had a headline that added a negative word to it, so I clicked that instead.” (FL respondent.)
5. People don’t feel well informed • Over half of all respondents said they are only somewhat informed when it comes to fluoridation issues. 80% not very informed
What We Can Do • Focus on the real issue: Our teeth and the America’s oral health challenge. • Inoculate decision-makers: • Remove the element of surprise that makes the anti messages sticky. • Give decision-makers a way to evaluate the claims. • Make support as visible as the minority of anti’s • Focus on the larger point: We’re healthier with fluoride than without it.
Tell the whole story Safety of the water supply Our oral health +
How to tell the whole story Every reputable health authority agrees: Without fluoridation, we are not as healthy as we should be Fluoride causes male pattern baldness Real issue is amount needed Saves money Makes teeth last longer Out-of-context quote from random study or from no study at all
What’s our narrative? Anti’s Narrative • Our country used to believe in fluoridation • But today we know it is not needed* • It may be responsible for __________. * • Let’s be safe and not put anything in the water* *It’s worth noting these statements are untrue. Possible Pro Narrative • We discovered the benefits of fluoride by accident. • Now, its benefits have been tested and confirmed over 65 years. • Science debunked its critics. • Scientists continue to monitor its impact, adjusting the optimal level • That’s why every major health organization still agrees: We’re healthier now with fluoridation than without it … because life is better with teeth.