52.50% - The correlation between fluoridation and better dental health is documented in studies spanning fifty years across dozens of countries — this isn't a hypothesis.
37.50% - Local and state health officials broadly agree that 0.7 to 1.5 mg per liter is safe and effective — that's the scientific consensus, not a pharmaceutical conspiracy.
10.00% - Better dental health reduces systemic infections and long-term healthcare costs — the economic argument for fluoridation is as strong as the public health one.
At approved fluoride levels, no statistically significant cognitive effect has been found.
65.63% - Local and state health officials broadly agree that 0.7 to 1.5 mg per liter is safe and effective — that's the scientific consensus, not a pharmaceutical conspiracy.
12.50% - The correlation between fluoridation and better dental health is documented in studies spanning fifty years across dozens of countries — this isn't a hypothesis.
10.94% - Fluoridated water has reduced tooth decay by 25% across all income levels since the 1960s — one of the cheapest, most effective public health interventions ever devised.
10.94% - Every time a community defluoridates, decay rates go up — fighting fluoridation isn't protecting public health, it's harming it.
50.00% - At approved fluoride levels, no statistically significant cognitive effect has been found.
50.00% - Cognitive concerns about fluoride come from research on concentrations many times the approved level.
0.00% - There is no statistically significant correlation between cognitive ability and the level of fluoride in the drinking water.
50.00% - Common European Framework of Reference for Languages