RFK Jr. Pushes to End Fluoride in Water, Faces Limits

U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is pressing to halt federal support for water fluoridation, leveraging his role to challenge a decades-old public health practice despite lacking direct authority over local systems.

Kennedy can’t order cities to stop but can sway CDC recommendations. He’s also working with the EPA to lower fluoride limits soon.

Fluoridation began in 1945 to fight tooth decay across communities. Kennedy calls it a neurotoxin tied to IQ drops and bone issues.

The CDC has long backed fluoride at 0.7 milligrams per liter safely. Recent studies hint at risks from higher exposure levels only.

Utah banned fluoridation in May, a win Kennedy hopes to replicate. He praised the state as a model for others to follow this year.

Dental experts defend fluoride as a cavity-fighting cornerstone. They warn removal could spike dental costs for families nationwide.

Kennedy’s task force will review fluoride’s health effects closely. Its findings could shift federal policy if evidence holds up.

Trump reportedly backs Kennedy’s “Make America Healthy” vision. This includes fluoride cuts, despite pushback from health officials.

Critics say Kennedy’s stance defies scientific consensus broadly. His vaccine skepticism fuels doubts about his leadership here too.

The EPA sets a 4-milligram cap, but Kennedy wants it at zero now. Local control means his influence hinges on persuasion, not mandates.

Public reaction splits between health freedom and science advocates. The debate may reshape water policy for years to come ahead.

Kennedy’s move reflects Trump’s broader anti-regulation ethos now. It tests how far personal crusades can sway federal health norms.

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