Post on 04-Jan-2016
description
transcript
Fluoridation seems like a “no-brainer”
• Helps Americans keep their teeth (reduces cavities by up to 40%)
• Saves millions in treatment costs and eliminates pain and suffering
• Nearly every large city and more than 195 million Americans benefit
• Is the most cost-efficient measure we can take to preserve oral health
1
A standard public health strategy
• Adding iodine to table salt
• Adding Vitamin D to milk
• Adding chlorine to drinking water and swimming pools
• Adding folic acid to breads and cereals
Fluoridation is one of many public health strategies used in the U.S.
Supported by all major health groups• American Academy of Pediatrics
• American Dental Association
• Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
• American Academy of Family Physicians
• American Medical Association
• American Academy of Physician Assistants
• U.S. Task Force on Community Preventive Services
• American Association for the Advancement of Science
• World Health Organization
• Office of Health Affairs, U.S. Department of Defense
• American Academy of Public Health Dentistry
• Institute of Medicine
• American Public Health Association
• National Consumers League
• Council of State Governments
• American Society for Clinical Nutrition
• Florida Department of Elder Affairs
• The Linus Pauling Institute
The CDC has named fluoridation one of “10 great public health
achievements of the 20th century”
Already the norm in most places
So why not everywhere?
1. Well-organized opponents
Aggressively Use the WebActivate a National Network
Add Credible Partners Spin the Science
2. We forgot what a difference it made
7
Support among
younger people
Support among
younger people Support
among older people
Support among older
people
Most people support community water fluoridation. But younger people – born after fluoridation was commonplace – are less supportive than their older counterparts.
3. How the issue is framed
• Main frame: Debate.
• 4 of 5 front-page stories focused on debate over fluoridation safety.
• Toxicity, danger and cancer are most frequent “anti” arguments
• One-note pro-argument: Fluoridation good for your teeth
8
“I was looking through the stories trying to figure out what to read and at the top they had a headline that added a negative word to it, so I clicked that instead.” (FL respondent.)
4. The impact of the internet
9
5. People don’t feel well informed
How informed on CWF?
Total Sample (n=1503)
Very informed 20%
Somewhat informed
54%
Not at all informed
26%
• Over half of all respondents said they are only somewhat informed when it comes to fluoridation issues.
80% not very informed
… and policymakers are no exception
11
6. Anti’s “warnings” are sticky
12
What We Can Do
• Focus on the real issue: Our teeth and the America’s oral health challenge.
• Inoculate decision-makers: – Remove the element of surprise that makes the anti
messages sticky.– Give decision-makers a way to evaluate the claims. – Make support as visible as the minority of anti’s
• Focus on the larger point: We’re healthier with fluoride than without it.
Tell the whole story
14
Safety of the water supply
Our oral
health+
How to tell the whole story
Fluoride causes male pattern
baldness
Fluoride causes male pattern
baldness
Out-of-context quote from random study or from no
study at all
Out-of-context quote from random study or from no
study at all
Every reputable health authority agrees: Without
fluoridation, we are not as healthy as we
should be
Every reputable health authority agrees: Without
fluoridation, we are not as healthy as we
should be
Makes teeth last longer
Makes teeth last longer
Saves moneySaves
moneyReal issue is
amount needed
Real issue is amount needed
What’s our narrative?
Anti’s Narrative•Our country used to believe in fluoridation•But today we know it is not needed*•It may be responsible for __________. *•Let’s be safe and not put anything in the water*
*It’s worth noting these statements are untrue.
Possible Pro Narrative•We discovered the benefits of fluoride by accident. • Now, its benefits have been tested and confirmed over 65 years.•Science debunked its critics.•Scientists continue to monitor its impact, adjusting the optimal level•That’s why every major health organization still agrees: We’re healthier now with fluoridation than without it … because life is better with teeth.
16