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Background Information
Tooth decay (dental caries) is a health problem that has plagued
humankind for centuries. The damage caused by caries has been an
inevitable fact of life for most people. The disease often means many
visits to the dentist to have damage and painful teeth repaired or
removed. Today, damage caused by tooth decay can be reduced, and in many
cases, prevented. This is largely as a result of fluoride.
Fluoride's benefits for teeth were discovered in the 1930s. Dental
scientists observed low decay rates among people whose water supplies
contained natural fluoride. Studies conducted during the 1940s and 1950s
confirmed that when a small amount of fluoride is added to the community
water supply (fluoridation), decay rates among residents of that community
decrease. Early studies focused primarily on the benefits of water
fluoridation for children, but recent studies demonstrate that decay rates
in adults are also reduced as a result of fluoride in the drinking water.
Fluoridation benefits people of all ages and backgrounds.
Water fluoridation prevents tooth decay mainly through direct contact
with teeth throughout life, but also when consumed by children during the
tooth forming years. The most inexpensive way to deliver the benefits of
fluoride to all residents of a community is through water fluoridation. All
water naturally contains some fluoride. When a community fluoridates its
water, it adjusts the level of fluoride in the water to an optimal level for
preventing tooth decay. Currently, more than 184 million people in the
United States are served by public water supplies containing enough fluoride
to protect teeth.
Healthy People 2010, is the plan that sets health goals for the
nation for the year 2010. This plan calls for at least 75 percent of the
population to be served by optimally fluoridated community water systems.
The current level is 69 percent. To reach this goal, public water systems
serving approximately 15 million more people should fluoridate their water.
Fluoride from many sources prevents tooth decay. Fluoride can be applied
directly to teeth through toothpaste, mouth rinses, professionally applied
fluoride treatments available in the dental office and dietary supplements
prescribed by a dentist, physician or other health professional. These
methods of delivering fluoride are more expensive than water fluoridation
and require a conscious decision to use them. However, the widespread
availability of fluorides, via water fluoridation, toothpaste, and other
sources, has resulted in the steady decline of dental caries throughout the
United States.
Date last reviewed: October 8, 2008
Date last updated: August 12, 2008
Content source:
Division of Oral Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and
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