MERCURY IN THE ENVIRONMENT. Dentists pollute our world!
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE, APRIL 5, 20059:48 AM
CONTACT: Mercury Policy Project Michael Bender, 802-223-9000 or
mercurypolicy@aol.com
Over 1,000 Tons of Dental Mercury
to be Emitted in Next 10-15 Years; Dentists are the number one mercury
polluters in the environment and fifth largest users.
MONTPELIER, VT -- April 4 -- A coalition of groups today released a report
in each of the state capitals of New England, grading the states on their
efforts to reduce dental mercury pollution.The report's number one
recommendation is that dentists reduce their use of mercury fillings in
consideration of environmental impacts. The report recommended state
actions to require that:
- dentists reduce mercury releases and notify patients about hazards
of mercury fillings and alternatives;
- dental insurance policies provide equal coverage for alternative
fillings in state contracts; and
- prior to cremation, steps be taken to reduce the mercury emitted
into the environment from fillings, since those releases are projected
to double in 20 years.
"In the short term, if the use of mercury fillings were drastically
reduced, within a decade or so dental mercury releases would be half
what they are now," said Michael Bender, primary author of the report,
and director of the Montpelier, Vt.-based Mercury Policy Project.
"Within 15 years they would be minimal." "Of the mercury currently
used in all products in the U.S., EPA estimates that mercury fillings
(an "amalgam" of mercury and other metals) comprises 55 percent of the
total -- or over 1,000 tons of mercury residing in the mouths of
Americans today nationwide. If current trends continue, this mercury
will be haphazardly released into the environment over the next 10 to 15
years as those fillings age and are replaced, according to the report's
authors. The groups releasing the report, including the National
Wildlife Federation, Health Care Without Harm, Clean Water Action,
Natural Resources Council of Maine and the Mercury Policy Project, gave
higher grades to Maine ("B"), Connecticut ("B"), Massachusetts ("B") and
Rhode Island ("C-") for promoting use of separators for mercury filling
material (amalgam) by dentists to reduce pollution. Lower grades were
given to New Hampshire ("D-plus") and Vermont ("D") primarily due to the
small number of dentists with amalgam separators. "For as little as
$37 per month, a dentist could prevent over 95 percent of his or her
office's mercury from going down the drain through employing best
managementt practices and using amalgam separators," said Michael
Bender, the report's primary author and director of the Mercury Policy
Project. "Unfortunately, even though dentists are the number one
contributor of mercury to wastewater and the third largest mercury user
in the U.S., the American Dental Association still opposes installation
of amalgam separators. "Bender notes that while the ADA supports some
best management practices for dentists, ADA's Web site shows that it
does so primarily as a tactical excuse for dentists not to install
separators. Bender pointed out that even though ADA research clearly
shows how well amalgam separators work, just last week ADA bragged that
"...organized dentists have successfully staved off the mandatory
installation of amalgam separators. "Yet an increasing number of state
and national dental associations support amalgam separators. A case in
point is in Vermont, where the state dental society has now committed to
supporting amalgam separator mandates over a voluntary approach."It
seems clear from the science that amalgam separators do an excellent job
at reducing amalgam in wastewater significantly. While no one likes to
have mandates put on them, it seems clear to us that we will achieve a
much higher level of compliance with mandated separators than a
voluntary approach," said Daniel Ferraris, DMS, and past president of
the Vermont Dental Society, in written testimony recently provided to a
Vermont legislative committee.Also, a national dental society hailed the
report's findings. "Even though an increasing number of dentists no
longer use mercury, they need to use amalgam separators because they are
still removing mercury," said Richard J. Chanin, DMD, president,
International Academy of Oral Medicine and Toxicology. "Yet the best way
to reduce dental mercury pollution in the future is not to use mercury
in the first place." An
estimated 14 percent of all mercury used in the
U.S
today is for dental fillings, according to the report. Current
dental practices result in significant quantities of mercury being
released down the drain, in the trash, in biomedical waste and from
crematories, contributing to the build up of this toxic heavy metal in
the environment.
The report, "Taking a Bite Out of Mercury Pollution: The 2005 Report
Card on Dental Mercury Use and Release Reduction," also reveals
troubling new findings that mercury emissions from cremation are
expected to more than double over the next 20 years. This is due to
growing number of amalgam retained in people when they die, and
increases in cremations.In 1998, the New England Governors committed to
a "virtual elimination" goal for anthropogenic mercury releases. In
2003, the New England Governors' Mercury Task Force stated that it "will
pursue a goal of having 50 percent of dentists in the region install
dental amalgam separators by the end of 2005. Each jurisdiction will
develop an aggressive strategy to ensure that this goal is aggressively
pursued." Mercury levels in the environment have more than tripled
over the past century or so due to human activities. EPA scientists
estimate that one in six women of child-bearing age have unsafe mercury
levels, translating to 630,000 born at risk each year in the U.S. Also,
there is growing evidence that exposure to mercury can adversely affect
the developing and adult cardiovascular system and may contribute to
heart disease in adults. For more information:· The full report on New
England states is available at:
http://www.mercurypolicy.org. · Richard J. Chanin, DMD, president of
the International Academy of Oral Medicine and Toxicology, can be
reached at 513-729-2800, also see:
http://www.iaomt.org. · See
http://www.mercurypolicy.org/new/documents/Quotations_from_Dentist040405.pdf
and
http://www.mercurypolicy.org/new/documents/CT_petitionfiled_102204.pdf.
· Also see
http://www.ada.org/prof/resources/pubs/jada/reports/report_separator.pdf
and
http://www.ada.org/prof/resources/pubs/adanews/adanewsarticle.asp?articleid=1327.
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