Department of Environmental Health, Emory University Rollins School of Public Health, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Program on Reproductive Health and the Environment, Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA.
J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol. 2024 Jan;34(1):68-76. doi: 10.1038/s41370-023-00570-w. Epub 2023 Jun 30.
Although the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) considers fluoridation of community water systems (CWSs) to be a major public health achievement responsible for reducing dental disease, recent epidemiologic evidence suggests that chronic exposure to population-relevant levels of fluoride may also be associated with adverse child neurodevelopmental outcomes. To our knowledge, a nationally representative database of CWS fluoride concentration estimates that can be readily linked to US epidemiologic cohorts for further study is not publicly available. Our objectives were to evaluate broad regional and sociodemographic inequalities in CWS fluoride concentrations across the US, and to determine if county-level racial/ethnic composition was associated with county-level CWS fluoride.
We generated CWS-level (N = 32,495) and population weighted county-level (N = 2152) fluoride concentration estimates using over 250,000 routine compliance monitoring records collected from the US Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) Third Six Year Review (2006-2011). We compared CWS-level fluoride distributions across subgroups including region, population size served, and county sociodemographic characteristics. In county-level spatial error models, we also evaluated geometric mean ratios (GMRs) of CWS fluoride per 10% higher proportion of residents belonging to a given racial/ethnic subgroup.
4.5% of CWSs (serving >2.9 million residents) reported mean 2006-2011 fluoride concentrations ≥1500 µg/L (the World Health Organization's guideline for drinking water quality). Arithmetic mean, 90, and 95 percentile contaminant concentrations were greatest in CWSs reliant on groundwater, located in the Southwest and Eastern Midwest, and serving Semi-Urban, Hispanic communities. In fully adjusted spatial error models, the GMR (95% CI) of CWS fluoride per a 10% higher proportion of county residents that were Hispanic/Latino was 1.16 (1.10, 1.23).
We find that over 2.9 million US residents are served by public water systems with average fluoride concentrations exceeding the World Health Organization's guidance limit. We also find significant inequalities in community water system fluoride concentration estimates (2006-2011) across the US, especially for Hispanic/Latino communities who also experience elevated arsenic and uranium in regulated public drinking water systems. Our fluoride estimates can be leveraged in future epidemiologic studies to assess the potential association between chronic fluoride exposure and related adverse outcomes.
尽管美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)认为社区水系统(CWS)的氟化是减少牙科疾病的主要公共卫生成就,但最近的流行病学证据表明,慢性暴露于与人群相关的氟化物水平也可能与儿童神经发育不良结果有关。据我们所知,目前还没有公开的全国代表性 CWS 氟化物浓度估计数据库,该数据库可以方便地与美国流行病学队列联系起来进行进一步研究。我们的目标是评估美国 CWS 氟化物浓度的广泛区域和社会人口不平等,并确定县级种族/族裔构成是否与县级 CWS 氟化物有关。
我们使用美国环境保护署(EPA)第三次六年审查(2006-2011 年)收集的超过 250,000 份常规合规监测记录,生成了 CWS 水平(N=32,495)和人口加权县级(N=2152)的氟化物浓度估计值。我们比较了包括地区、服务人口规模和县级社会人口特征在内的 CWS 水平氟化物分布。在县级空间误差模型中,我们还评估了 CWS 氟化物每增加 10%特定种族/族裔亚群居民比例的几何平均值比(GMR)。
4.5%的 CWS(服务超过 290 万居民)报告了 2006-2011 年平均氟化物浓度≥1500μg/L(世界卫生组织饮用水质量指南)。依赖地下水、位于西南和中西部东部的 CWS 以及服务于半城市、西班牙裔社区的算术平均值、90 和 95 百分位污染物浓度最高。在完全调整的空间误差模型中,CWS 氟化物每增加 10%县级居民中西班牙裔/拉丁裔的 GMR(95%CI)为 1.16(1.10,1.23)。
我们发现,超过 290 万美国居民由公共供水系统提供服务,其平均氟化物浓度超过世界卫生组织的指导限值。我们还发现,美国各地的社区水系统氟化物浓度估计值存在显著不平等,尤其是在西班牙裔/拉丁裔社区,这些社区的受监管公共饮用水系统中砷和铀含量也较高。我们的氟化物估计值可用于未来的流行病学研究,以评估慢性氟化物暴露与相关不良结果之间的潜在关联。