A damning new study is shedding light on the potential adverse effects of fluoride exposure, showing a link between the toxic chemical and IQ levels.
Conducted by a team of researchers from the University of Toronto, the study analyzed “300 sets of mothers and children in Mexico” over the span of 12 years.
The results were startling, showing “a drop scores on intelligence tests for every 0.5 milligram-per-liter increase in fluoride exposure beyond 0.8 milligrams per liter found in urine.”
Possibly even more important is that the potential reductions in intelligence were only found during the prenatal stage (prior to birth), whereas post-birth children saw “no significant influence” from the chemical.
This lends credence to the notion that babies in the womb are susceptible to outside influences, despite what intuition may tell us.
“Childhood exposure to fluoride is safer than prenatal,” said Howard Hu, lead author of the study and founding dean at the University of Toronto, “There is pretty good science now to support the fact that the fetal system tends to be more sensitive to environmental toxicants than once the child is born.”
Interestingly, the researchers measured fluoride levels by measuring the amount found in the mothers’ urine, as opposed to other studies which simply test levels found in local water supplies.
In Poland, a separate study using a similar measuring method found that fluoride levels in water were slightly lower than those found in Mexico.