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Mercury In Tooth Fillings Targeted
By William Hathaway
August 31, 2004
Environmental groups are urging state
officials to tell dentists to stop using amalgam fillings as part of
an effort to reduce use of mercury in Connecticut.
The groups have called a press
conference at the Legislative Office Building in Hartford today to
urge the state Department of Environmental Protection to enforce a
2002 law that bans products with mercury if alternatives are
available.
“When there is a viable alternative to
a toxic pollutant, you have to say, ‘You can't do that anymore,
switch to something else,’” said Betty McLaughlin, director of
environmental affairs at the Connecticut Audubon Society.
DEP officials say the state's mercury
reduction law was never intended to ban the use of mercury in
fillings. Instead, the state is asking that dentists use separators
to extract mercury from wastewater and take other steps to ensure
mercury does not enter the environment, DEP spokesman Matt Fritz
said Monday.
Dental fillings are not exempt from the
state's mercury reduction law, said Charles G. Brown, counsel for
Consumers for Dental Choice, a Washington, D.C.-based lobbying group
that also is seeking an end to use of mercury in dental fillings. He
added that dentists could use nontoxic composite fillings instead.
But, said Dr. Jonathan Meiers,
associate professor and division head of operative dentistry at the
University of Connecticut School of Dentistry, amalgams are easier
to use, more durable and about 30 percent cheaper than composites.
Even so, Meiers added, many patients do not like the metallic look
of amalgams and prefer composites.
Dental fillings account for a high
percentage of all mercury used in the United States,
environmentalists say.
By one estimate, two-thirds of fillings
used by dentists nationally contain mercury. A 2002 study published
by the Mercury Policy Project, a Vermont-based group that seeks to
reduce use of toxin worldwide, estimates that dentistry accounts for
44 tons - or about 25 percent of the annual amount of mercury used
in the United States.
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