Ivor the Engineer
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Feb 18, 2006
- Messages
- 10,638
Why wasn't that said in the actual study?
The actual study:
Conclusions
This review presents a summary of the best available and most reliable evidence on the safety and efficacy of water fluoridation.
Given the level of interest surrounding the issue of public water fluoridation, it is surprising to find that little high quality research has been undertaken. As such, this review should provide both researchers and commissioners of research with an overview of the methodological limitations of previous research conducted in this area.
The evidence of a benefit of a reduction in caries should be considered together with the increased prevalence of dental fluorosis. The research evidence is of insufficient quality to allow confident statements about other potential harms or whether there is an impact on social inequalities. This evidence on benefits and harms needs to be considered along with the ethical, environmental, ecological, costs and legal issues that surround any decisions about water fluoridation. All of these issues fell outside the scope of this review.
Any future research into the safety and efficacy of water fluoridation should be carried out with appropriate methodology to improve the quality of the existing evidence base.
Also, what makes this almost decade old study so authoritative in your eyes?
It was a review of studies performed world-wide. I admit I'm going out on a limb believing that the authors were not idiots. Perhaps one day I'll organise my own DBPCT.