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Árgangur

Læknablaðið - 01.06.1973, Síða 51

Læknablaðið - 01.06.1973, Síða 51
LÆKNABLAÐIÐ 125 British electors of the benefits to children’s teeth of fluoridation of water supplies. We have to find better ways of informing people. It is fantastic that uninformed opposition to a harmless addition to drink- ing water should be allowed to impose on our children double the amount of dental caries thsy would otherwise suffer. Much of the traditional work in personal preventive medicine must continue and in the supervision of child health in Britam it could certainly be greatly improved with closer coilaboration between those work- ing in public health, general practice and hospital paediatrics. Our infant mortality is currently up to a third greater than yours and it could be substantially re- duced if the same kind of attention was given to it as has been given over 20 years to maternal mortality. Perhaps most of all in the traditiona! field we have failed to develop effective methods of health education. The wide-spred misuse of drugs is an example of this failure and although the heroin problem has been contained, that of the increase in venereal disease has not. There we are faced with the absurd situation that two communicable diseases, readily treatable, have not been eliminat- ed but instead one has been increasing over the last 16 years to a level wh.ich has reached the highest found at the end of the war. This is a major failure of com- munication which it must be the object of preventive medicine in the future to remedy. During the last 25 years there has been rapid development in the pharmaceutical industry, producing first powerful drugs against the infections, the results of which have alreadv been mentioned, and second- ly a wide variety of drugs with powerful effects on physiological function, narrow margins of safety and possibility of serious toxic effects or of addiction. Every country using these drugs reauires assurance of their margins of safety and some of them have lethal effects in long-term use, quite aside from the occurrence of idiosyncrasy. The situation was dramatically brought to public notice with the thalidomide incident when a good tranquillising drug proved to have unsuspected teratogenic ef- fects. In Britain, at least, one of the most effeetive developments in preventive medi- cine in the 1960s was the introduction of machinery for screening new drugs before they were released for general use and for monitoring the adverse effects of drugs already in use. This machinery made it possible to identify the very small hazard of serious thrombo-embolic effects from use of oestrogen-progestogen mixtures as oral contraceptives and to reduce those ef- fects sharply when pills of the smaller oestrogen dose became available. In 1970 our records show a sharp reduction in deaths from thrombo-embolic disease in women in the relevant age group. This is obviously a continuing commitment which will increase in complexity as more is learned of interatction between drugs and other substances, naturally or artificially intrcduced into the environment. World population control has become an issue of great importance. The term is little liked, but that must be the objective of familv planning for most nations in the future. The newer methods of contra- ception are more certain and act over periods which make user failure less like- ly. They are expensive and they are not wholly free from risk, but in comparison with the risks of pregnancy they are small indeed. When one considers the danger of abortion which legally or illegally is an alternative used in most countries, contraception is obviously to be preferred as a method of control. Abortion has been for some years the largest single cause of maternal deaths in Britain where the maternal mortality is now as low as 16 per 100,000 births. Part of this is due to terminations necessary on medical grounds late in pregnancy and part to the per- sistence of illicit terminations despite the existence of a legal means. 34 women died after abortion in England and Wales last year and that number could almost certainly be hailved. It is estimated that between 2 and 300,000 pregnancies which are unwanted occur each year, some of them terminated bv abortion and we have the capacity, if it is sensibly used, to pre- vent those pregnancies. Effective use of family planning must surely be one of

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