Drinking Water Fluoridation in Washington State (WAC 246-290-460) Washington State Board of Health...

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Drinking Water Fluoridationin Washington State (WAC 246-290-460)

Washington State Board of HealthJune 18, 2015

Clark Halvorson, DirectorOffice of Drinking Water

2

Office of Drinking Water’s Mission

We work with others to protect the health

of the people of Washington Stateby ensuring safe

and reliabledrinking water.

3

Overview

• New recommendation from Health and Human Services.

• History of fluoridation in WA and the current WAC.

• How levels have been set in past and why a change now?

• Next steps.

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U.S. Department of Health and Human ServicesRecommendation for Community Water Fluoridation

• The new recommendation is for a single level of 0.7

milligrams of fluoride per liter of water.

• It updates and replaces the previous recommended range (0.7 to 1.2 milligrams per liter) issued in 1962.

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Fluoridation Definition

“Water fluoridation is the adjustment of the natural fluoride concentration of fluoride-deficient water to the level recommended for optimal dental health.”

—Fluoridation Facts, ADA, 2005

Natural F- in water + Added F- = 1.0 mg/L “Optimal Level”

(existing)

• 1 part per million (ppm) ≈ 1 milligram per liter (mg/L)

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Fluoride is Naturally Occurring

• Surface water (rivers)—typically low concentrations of 0.2 mg/L or less

• Groundwater (wells)—higher concentrations of 0.1 mg/L to over 5.0 mg/L

• Ocean water is typically 0.8 to 1.4 mg/L

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Washington State, 1950

Optimal Fluoride Levels, 1962

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WAC 246-290-460“Fluoridation of drinking water”

• Maintain concentration between 0.8 and 1.3 mg/L.

• Main elements of regulation include:– Review and approve system design.

– Operational requirements.

– Field monitoring.

– Lab monitoring.

– Monthly operations report.

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Why a New Recommendation from HHS for Community Water Fluoridation?

• Sources of fluoride have increased since the early 1960s. – Toothpaste and mouth rinses, prescription fluoride

supplements, and fluoride applied by dental professionals.

• Current evidence on fluid intake of children across various outdoor air temperatures.

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Fluid Intake and Climate

Mean Total Fluid Intake per Body Weight and Mean Daily Maximum Temperature

(NHANES III, 1988-94)

y = 0.13x + 74.3

(p=0.37, R2=0.001) 40

60

80

100

120

50 60 70 80 90Temperature (F)

(ml/k

g/d

ay)

Sohn W, Heller KE, Burt BA. Fluid consumption related to climate among children in the United States. J Pub Health Dent 2001; Vol.61;2; .

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Next Steps

• Communicate to utilities our recommendation for operation until the rule is updated.

– Develop draft rule text – July 2015

– Informal comment period – August. 2015

– Draft significant analysis – Nov. 2015

– Brief SBOH EH Committee – Nov. 2015

– SBOH public hearing – March 2016

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Questions?