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Get Ready! Watershed Event in Mercury Fillings History: An Update from Charles G Brown, Nat'l Counsel, Consumers for Dental Choice

Watershed event in history of mercury fillings coming this week

The turning point of our movement comes this week. Because of our landmark lawsuit, the U.S
Food and Drug Administration must now set the ground-rules for the use of mercury fillings, an
action that agency refused to take for 30 years until we filed the case of Moms Against Mercury et
al. v. Von Eschenbach.

Due to our years of work -- your work, my work, this movement’s work -- our moment has arrived.
FDA no longer sits in the hip pocket of the American Dental Association on this issue. We are going
to get a regulation that moves us to the middle of the playing field. Don’t get your hopes too high --
neither side will get the victory each seeks. But the mercury secret -- hidden for years by
manufacturers, the American Dental Association, and the FDA -- will be out this week.

Consumers for Dental Choice has a ten-point plan to try to turn this event into the beginning of the
end of mercury fillings -- we will challenge manufacturers and distributors, insurance companies and
Medicaid agencies, Wall Street and trial lawyers. If the American Dental Association realizes this is
the end of the road for its 19th-century foundation-stone, fine. If not, it can fall on its poisonous
sword.

For the past six months, we have executed an aggressive program to keep the issue front-and
center at FDA, via work on Capitol Hill and with the media. And we challenged the Commissioner
herself. I wrote two letters of objection to FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg about her five
years as a board member of Henry Schein Inc., the colossal dental products distributor. My
challenge succeeded: Commissioner Hamburg recused herself from participating in the rulemaking!

Remember how desperate things were when we started, in the mid-1990s? Dentists were silenced by
the gag rule… almost all consumers were unaware that “silver fillings” are mainly mercury… the
system was held in place by the Iron Triangle of the ADA, the FDA, and state dental boards. Two
true visionaries -- one in the East, one in the West -- created Consumers for Dental Choice: Bob
Jones of Colorado (now Texas) and Sue Ann Taylor of Georgia. Inspired by Hal Huggins, we began.

In the first phase of our movement, we knocked out the notorious gag rule in state after state --
Pennsylvania, Arizona, Florida, California, Oregon, Iowa, Alabama, Maine, Minnesota,Connecticut,
and Washington. This trailblazing work was done by consumer activists like Carol Ward, the late
Maz Levy, and Joyce Van Haaften; lawyers like Jim Turner, Sandy Duffy, Sandy Keech, and Shawn
Khorrami, filmmakers like Sue Ann Taylor; writers like Mark Genrich, dentists like Terry Lee, Andy
Landerman, Milt McIlwain, Mark Breiner, and Ada Frazier; and dental board members like Ron
King and Jessica Saepoff. Dentists could finally advocate, advise, and advertise mercury-free
dentistry.

The second phase was about informing consumers: we gained fact sheet laws and ensured their
enforcement (often the more difficult task). In California, we created a political tsunami by shutting
down the dental board, an act that sent shock waves to every other state dental board. Led
by Anita Vazquez Tibau, advised by consultant Pete Conaty, and chronicled by filmmaker Kelly
Gallagher who is producing a movie about this movement, we had activists like Bill Magavern and
dentists like Ward Eccles on the outside and new dental board members Chet Yokoyama and Kevin
Biggers on the inside. The Philadelphia fact sheet project was led by Freya Koss; in Maine it was
Pam Anderson; in New Hampshire Rosie Cronin; and in Connecticut Mark Mitchell and media guru
Mike London. Outstanding lawmakers wrote these laws: Diane Watson of California, Mike Michaud
of Maine, Hal Lynd of New Hampshire, and Blondell Reynolds Brown of Philadelphia.

The third phase of our work involved taking on FDA: With state laws implemented, with the dental
board threat to our dentists fading, with our movement having national respect, we could have real
impact -- and we did. Attorney Johann Wehrle, at the time a law student, designed a plan to
challenge the agency, first via petitions, then a lawsuit. In between petitions and lawsuits was the
dramatic September 2006 hearing of the FDA Scientific Advisory Committees where the scientists,
led by Dr. Mike Fleming, voted 17 to 7 that FDA staff was wrong when it said mercury fillings are
safe. After that vote, Dr. Rich Fischer led a team of scientists to urge FDA staff to change their
position. All along, our friends in Congress, led by Diane Watson and Dan Burton, were holding
FDA's feet to the fire by insisting that the agency follow the law.

But the inertia continued. So we filed suit in December 2007 and moved for an injunction in April
2008. At a hearing in May, Judge Ellen Huvelle ruled that we were entitled to a regulation by FDA
on a date certain, but to no other relief; she ordered the parties into mediation. At an intense
negotiation session, we insisted on warnings in the interim between then and the classification date.
We got them in the website --- the best advisories issued by any national health agency on dental
mercury’s irreversible damage to children: "Dental amalgams contain mercury, which may have
neurotoxic effects on the nervous systems of developing children and fetuses." The overwhelming
and positive worldwide press response made clear that FDA had crossed its own Rubicon on the
mercury amalgam issue.

The plaintiffs in this landmark litigation who stayed the course were Moms Against Mercury (Amy
Carson and Angela Medlin), Connecticut Coalition for Environmental Justice (Dr. Mark Mitchell),
Oregonians for Life (Mary Starrett), Michael Bender, Senator Karen Johnson, Linda Brocato, Dr. Andy
Landerman, Anita Vazquez Tibau, and of course Consumers for Dental Choice.

We didn’t get this far by ourselves. We built broad alliances. Michael Bender of the highly effective
Mercury Policy Project leads the environmentalists; Ed Hogan and Emmitt Carlton reached out to
minority communities; Sandy Duffy recruited civil libertarians; and Sister Valerie Heinonen linked us
to the faith community. And we have had volunteers who have logged hundreds of hours, such as
Barbara Pierson, Mary Ann Newell, Linda Brocato, Elizabeth Wright, and Karen Burns, to name a
few.

With the FDA rule, we will enter our fourth -- and I firmly believe, final -- phase: the demise of
amalgam fillings. The momentum is ours.

The key to the upcoming rule, not surprisingly, will be the fine print: the new Special Controls.
That will tell us if the rule is strong or weak. My focus is the children: if we can protect boys and
girls, if we can protect the unborn, we have prevented amalgam from going to the most vulnerable.
From there, we can build toward ultimate victory.

If the FDA rule is abysmal -- if it contradicts its own website advisory for children and pregnant
women that we negotiated to settle the lawsuit -- we intend to appeal. But, first we must see the
rule FDA is unveiling this week.

--- Charlie
27 July 2009


Charles G. Brown, National Counsel
Consumers for Dental Choice
316 F St., N.E., Suite 210, Washington, DC 20002
Ph. 202.544-6333; fax 202.544-6331
charlie@toxicteeth.org,
www.toxicteeth.org
Working for Mercury-Free Dentistry

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Tags: ADA, FDA, amalgams, dental, fillings, mercury, silver, toxicity

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Comment by OCNaturalDoc on July 30, 2009 at 2:23pm
You summed it up. It was clever of the ADA to call them 'silver'. Did you know that if a dentist told you the truth, they would have been barred by the ADA? Imagine having to live with THAT!

Getting back to you....I don't know what your habits are, but daily flossing will help keep plaque off the surfaces. Bacteria loves to hide in dark, moist places....the gumline is their 'riviera'. When there's a build up of bacteria, it gets into the bloodstream. Having a cleaning or other work can stirs the bacteria and you may feel a little 'sick' after, depending on what your tolerances are....it would make sense that you would be less tolerant. You may even consider flossing more than once a day....talk to your dentist about it. Some people do it after every time they eat. My dentist once said, 'you don't have to floss every tooth...just the ones you want to keep." Funny guy :-)

Charlie has an update on this issue....and it's not good news. More later.

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