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US EPA takes action to review fluoride in drinking waters

According to a Federal Register notice published on Wednesday, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has begun the first phase of its "expedited" review of safe fluoride levels in drinking water. This is a key priority for the Trump administration’s "Make America Health Again" agenda.

According to the notice, the agency's final toxic assessment will help inform possible revisions of fluoride drinking standards under the Safe Drinking Water Act and also support the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommendations regarding?fluoride consumption in drinking water.

The MAHA movement, which supports Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., has made it a priority to remove the mineral fluoride naturally present in drinking water.

Kennedy, a long-time anti-vaccine activist, has implemented MAHA's priorities, such as reducing recommendations for childhood vaccinations, attracting rebukes from major medical groups.

Kennedy has opposed the addition of fluoride in public drinking water for improving?dental care, and claimed that 'without scientific evidence' water fluoridation levels at U.S. level is associated with cancer, among other health problems.

Kennedy announced last year that he was going to convene a panel of independent health experts in order to make a recommendation about fluoride. He also said that he intended to instruct the CDC not to recommend fluoride for drinking water.

In?May, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced that it would take fluoride supplements from children's markets.

The American Dental Association continues to support community water fluoridation. Studies have shown that it reduces tooth decay in children and adults by over 25%.

In 2024, a federal court ordered the EPA to tighten fluoride regulations and to address the risks of fluoridating drinking water to children's IQ. The EPA announced in April that it would speed up the next fluoride assessment, as required by the Safe Drinking Water Act, which mandates a review every six years of the drinking water regulations.

MAHA leaders have pressed EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin to align his agency’s agenda with their priorities of curbing pesticide application and reducing chemical exposure.

In the notice, it was stated that the EPA would accept public comments for a period of 30 days. The draft assessment will then be peer reviewed by external experts.

(source: Reuters)