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2011/09/21 Council Agenda Packet
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2011/09/21 Council Agenda Packet
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Council Agenda Packet
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9/21/2011
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For immediate release: September 22, 2011 <br /> NEWS RELEASE <br /> Precedent-Setting Fluoride Personal Injury Case Filed <br /> Dental Fluorosis Complaint Is First In an Expected Flood of Public & Private Sector Claims <br /> Ellijay, GA—Dental industry representatives have long fretted in their professional journals that fluoride <br /> providers could one day face legal actions for harm caused by ingested fluorides. <br /> The fear was that the citizens with a permanent staining and disfigurement of teeth called "dental fluorosis" <br /> would bring legal actions upon learning that fluorides they had swallowed had caused the damage to their teeth. <br /> Now, after this year's admission by federal officials that fluorides are causing increasing amounts of fluorosis, <br /> an era of fluoride personal injury and toxic tort litigation appears poised to begin with the recent filing of a <br /> precedent-setting case in the Federal District Court in Maryland. <br /> The legal action was filed against corporate giants Nestle USA Inc.,Nestle Waters North America, Inc., and <br /> Gerber Products Company on behalf of a teenage girl with multiple permanent teeth disfigured by dental <br /> fluorosis. <br /> The complaint notes that as a baby and young child, around 90% of the water the girl consumed was fluoridated <br /> bottled water sold by the Nestle defendants. The girl's parents had purchased the water based on its advertised <br /> dental benefit for children. <br /> According to the lead attorney on the case, Washington D.C.-based Chris Nidel, the young woman's family now <br /> faces significant costs for damage-covering dental veneers. <br /> The financial impact of the teen's fluorosis is even greater over the long term. The veneers will need to be <br /> replaced four or five times, resulting in a lifetime emote ial cost of more than $100,000 in dental expenses. <br /> Attorney Nidel points to a photo of his client's teeth. "In this case, a photo really is worth a thousand words," he <br /> states. "The water providers had a responsibility to warn their customers about fluorosis,but they did not." <br /> He says the girl's mother told him, "I thought I was doing the right thing for my daughter when she was a child, <br /> by giving.her bottled water that contained fluoride. Her teeth have now been permanently damaged by fluorosis. <br /> She is extremely self-conscious about her smile. Her friends ask her about her teeth. And now we're faced with <br /> extensive cosmetic restorations. It's not simple, and it's expensive." <br /> Seeking compensation for the teen's teeth damage and its impacts,the complaint lists counts of strict liability, <br /> negligence, breach of implied warranty, fraud, and negligent infliction of emotional distress. <br /> Public health professional Daniel G. Stockin of The Lillie Center Inc., a firm working to end water fluoridation, <br /> says, "I believe water utilities will note that the bottled waters that are the focus of this complaint contained <br /> around 0.8 parts per million of fluoride, which is right near the amount that public utilities add to their water. <br /> We know that millions of people have dental fluorosis, and that minority populations are disproportionately <br /> harmed by it. People are not being openly told what fluorosis really is or ow ' p it fives. I think it <br /> will be very interesting to see the revelations that come out now, as fluoride product sellers and fluoridated <br /> water endorsers begin to be placed under oath in all sorts of fluoride-related legal actions." <br /> Stockin adds, "There were also warnings in dental and other publications that fluorides could potentially cause <br /> bone disorders, kidney harm, and thyroid impairment. I believe we'll quickly see fluoride lawsuits grow way <br /> beyond fluorosis cases." <br />
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