This is a piece of research I am doing for college and am interested to find out what people know about the issue.
Is the level of fluoride in the water directly proportional to dental health in different regions?
Yes it does- areas with higher levels of fluoride in the water have better levels of dental than those with lower levels of flouride. Some towns add flouride to water for this reason. You should look into other health pro/cons for fluoride.
Also try the following webpages:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/957372...
http://www.dentalhealth.org.uk/faqs/leaf...
http://www.wateraid.org.uk/documents/flu...
Reply:Heavens no. Flouride doesn't effect dental health, that's just the intellectual sugar coating to get us to accept it as an ingredient in toothpaste and an excluse to put it in our water supply.
Flouride is a drug that makes people more docile.
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Reply:I doubt it, there are a lot more factors than fluoride to consider, mainly because the worst areas won't even drink tap water they'll have fizzy drinks and alcohol. Also some areas are having fluoride specifically added to the water supply to test its effects so its not a good time to be doing that sort of research, no-one will have collated much information on it, certainly not for public use and doing your own primary research will be impossible so i think you might need to rephrase your topic to something a bit easier.
In a simple answer though "No" fluride in water does not directly link with oral hygiene, you'd be better off looking at the type of restaurants/ pubs supermarkets etc. in a area compared to dental health
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