I haven’t looked at that report in particular, but I VERY quickly looked into fluoride 6 months ago for my own decision-making purposes, and I wound up feeling like (1) a bunch of the studies are confounded by the fact that polluted areas have more fluoride, and people with more income / education / etc. [which are IQ correlates] are better at avoiding living in polluted areas and drinking the water, (2) getting fluoride out of my tap water is sufficiently annoying / weird that I don’t immediately want to bother in the absence of stronger beliefs (e.g. normal activated carbon filters don’t get the fluoride out), (3) I should brush with normal toothpaste then rinse with water, then use fluoride mouthwash right before bed (and NOT rinse with water afterwards, but do try extra hard to spit out as much of it as possible), (4) use fluoride-free toothpaste for the kids until they’re good at spitting it out (we were already doing this, I think it’s standard practice), but then switch.
I’m very open to (1) being wrong and any of (2-4) being the wrong call. FWIW, where I live, the tap water is 0.7mg/L.
I haven’t looked at that report in particular, but I VERY quickly looked into fluoride 6 months ago for my own decision-making purposes, and I wound up feeling like (1) a bunch of the studies are confounded by the fact that polluted areas have more fluoride, and people with more income / education / etc. [which are IQ correlates] are better at avoiding living in polluted areas and drinking the water, (2) getting fluoride out of my tap water is sufficiently annoying / weird that I don’t immediately want to bother in the absence of stronger beliefs (e.g. normal activated carbon filters don’t get the fluoride out), (3) I should brush with normal toothpaste then rinse with water, then use fluoride mouthwash right before bed (and NOT rinse with water afterwards, but do try extra hard to spit out as much of it as possible), (4) use fluoride-free toothpaste for the kids until they’re good at spitting it out (we were already doing this, I think it’s standard practice), but then switch.
I’m very open to (1) being wrong and any of (2-4) being the wrong call. FWIW, where I live, the tap water is 0.7mg/L.