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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (April 26, 2013)
13 Street roots April 26, 2013 fe» Community water fluoridation - the social justice issue of our time one of those decayed teeth — a tremendous burden for all people but particularly lower-income and homeless wice a month the Medical Teams youth and families. International mobile dental van Just this year Outside In opened a school- comes to Outside In to treat homeless youths and other patients within based health center at Milwaukie High School. I already knew the dental health our homeless youth services. - crisis was bad but the biggest eye-opener for Even though the van has the ability to do me was seeing how many children, from cleanings and preventive care, they mostly that beautiful school in a nice suburban do extractions and emergency care for our community of Portland, also have bad teeth. clients. For every homeless youth and low- Our dental health crisis isn’t just affecting income adult that gets an appointment, Portland’s low-income communities, people there are five who do not because the need are suffering across the board. is so great. Slots are so limited that we Our dental crisis is also telling when we prioritize by intensity of pain and level of compare Portland to other major cities in illness. It concerns me how many people I see in dental pain, especially when all dental the Pacific Northwest. For example, we know that Portland kids have 40 percent disease and decay is preventable. more decay as compared to kids in Seattle, When I first started working in homeless which is fluoridated. The solution is a medicine, a mentor of mine who worked combination of education, better access to with older homeless people told me that he dental care, and fluoridated water. For a could tell a lot about the general health of a crisis of this magnitude, we need to use all homeless person by looking at their teeth. I the tools available. think about my mentor’s words decades Brushing with fluoridated toothpaste is a later as I see homeless youth packing a start, but it’s clearly just not enough. cavity with tobacco snuff to ease the pain. Fluoridating our water ensures that every There are thousands of people in our family has access to a safe, effective and community with no access to dental care at affordable cavity prevention measure, all. Homeless youths often grew up poor regardless of income, ethnicity or education and many have never had dental insurance level. It’s time Portland makes a different or have ever seen a dentist. Sleeping on the choice, the community choice. It’s time to streets, in squats and shelters, homeless fluoridate our water as an investment in youth have very little control over personal children’s health, educational success, and hygiene or what they eat. social justice. At Outside In we see blackened and Studies have shown that fluoridated water missing teeth all the time. It is a serious reduces dental decay by at least 25 percent health problem. It is an employment percent. There have been more than 3,000 problem. It is a barrier to getting off the studies of its safety and effectiveness. streets and joining mainstream society. When youth have untreated decay and are Fluoridated water has been used for more in pain they miss school, have trouble eating than 65 years and over 200 million Americans currently have access to it. In and speaking, deal with the embarrassment of tooth loss, and have life-long healthissues fact, Portland is the largest city in the < country yet to enact water fluoridation — and costs. Addressing dental decay is also and our children’s teeth are paying the remarkably expensive. A 10-year-old child who develops cavities will pay more than price. To help with the dental health crisis new' $2,000 over a lifetime to take care of just BY JOHN DUKE John Duke is the Clinic and Health Services Director for Outside In. C O N T R IB U T IN G C O L U M N IS T S 17 t tfHfe T T *■> 3 0 3 5 S .E . D iv is io n | P o r tla n d , O R 9 7 2 0 2 5 0 3 .2 3 4 .7 4 9 9 clinics are opening — but they can’t keep up. We need to do more to prevent Portlanders from needing urgent care and painful extractions in the first place. The volunteer dentists on the Medical Teams International dental van and the dedicated staff at the new Multnomah County Billi Odegaard Dental Clinic are heroes, They are trying to help and heal people each day. The big problem is that they are fighting a fight that cannot be won one mouth at a time. There are too many barriers for low income people — we are living in a society where there are extreme disparities in access to dental care. Education, access to more care, and healthier foods are all an important part of the comprehensive dental health program we need in Portland but it only makes sense that our community should take the precaution of fluoridating our water to give everybody a better chance at having healthy teeth. Outside In has weighed the arguments for and against water fluoridation. We love the uniqueness of our community and our patriotic leaning toward what’s “weird,” but when weird ends up hurting children and those who can’t afford dental care, weird becomes “wrong.” This is one area where the public health data is irrefutable. Every major health care organization in the country, from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to the National Institutes of Health, has come to the same conclusion: Fluoridation is safe and effective. It is time for Portland to embrace the norm when it comes to protecting our kids. It’s time Portland makes a different choice. It’s time to fluoridate our water as an act of social justice. Please join me, Outside In, the Coalition of Community Health Clinics, Medical Teams International, and over 80 other organizations in endorsing a YES vote on ballot measure 26-151 on or before May 21. Visit www.HealthyKidsHealthyPortland.org to learn more. Portland www.portlandhearingvoices.net