In the wooded highlands of northern Arkansas, where small towns have few dentists, water officials who serve more than 20,000 people have for more than a decade openly defied state law by refusing to add fluoride to the drinking water.
For its refusal, the Ozark Mountain Regional Public Water Authority has received hundreds of state fines amounting to about $130,000, which are stuffed in a cardboard box and left unpaid, said Andy Anderson, who is opposed to fluoridation and has led the water system for nearly two decades.
This Ozark region is among hundreds of rural American communities that face a one-two punch to oral health: a dire shortage of dentists and a lack of fluoridated drinking water, which is widely viewed among dentists as one of the most effective tools to prevent tooth decay. But as the anti-fluoride movement builds unprecedented momentum, it may turn out that the Ozarks were not behind the times after all.
鈥淲e will eventually win,鈥 Anderson said. 鈥淲e will be vindicated.鈥
Fluoride, a naturally occurring mineral, when added to drinking water, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the American Dental Association. But the anti-fluoride movement has been energized since a government report last summer found a possible link between lower IQ in children and consuming amounts of fluoride that are higher than what is recommended in American drinking water. Dozens of communities have decided to stop fluoridating in recent months, and state officials in Florida and Texas have urged their water systems to do the same. to become the first state to ban it in tap water.
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has long espoused fringe health theories, has called fluoride an 鈥溾 and 鈥渄angerous neurotoxin鈥 and said the Trump administration will recommend it be removed from all public drinking water.
Separately, Republican efforts to extend tax cuts and shrink federal spending may squeeze Medicaid, which could deepen existing shortages of dentists in rural areas where many residents depend on the federal insurance program for whatever dental care they can find.
Dental experts warn that the simultaneous erosion of Medicaid and fluoridation could exacerbate a crisis of rural oral health and reverse decades of progress against tooth decay, particularly for children and those who rarely see a dentist.
鈥淚f you have folks with little access to professional care and no access to water fluoridation,鈥 said Steven Levy, a dentist and leading fluoride researcher at the University of Iowa, 鈥渢hen they are missing two of the big pillars of how to keep healthy for a lifetime.鈥
Many already are.
Overlapping 鈥楧ental Deserts鈥 and Fluoride-Free Zones
Nearly 25 million Americans live in areas without enough dentists 鈥 more than twice as many as prior estimates by the federal government 鈥 according to that measured U.S. 鈥渄ental deserts鈥 with more depth and precision than before.
Hawazin Elani, a Harvard dentist and epidemiologist who co-authored the study, found that many shortage areas are rural and poor, and depend heavily on Medicaid. But many dentists do not accept Medicaid because payments can be low, Elani said.
The ADA has estimated that only treat patients on Medicaid.
鈥淚 suspect this situation is much worse for Medicaid beneficiaries,鈥 Elani said. 鈥淚f you have Medicaid and your nearest dentists do not accept it, then you will likely have to go to the third, or fourth, or the fifth.鈥
The Harvard study identified over 780 counties where more than half of the residents live in a shortage area. Of those counties, at least 230 also have mostly or completely unfluoridated public drinking water, according to a 麻豆女优 analysis of . That means people in these areas who can鈥檛 find a dentist also do not get protection for their teeth from their tap water.
The 麻豆女优 Health News analysis does not cover the entire nation because it does not include private wells and 13 states do not submit fluoride data to the CDC. But among those that do, most counties with a shortage of dentists and unfluoridated water are in the south-central U.S., in a cluster that stretches from Texas to the Florida Panhandle and up into Kansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma.
In the center of that cluster is the , which serves the Arkansas counties of Boone, Marion, Newton, and Searcy. It has refused to add fluoride ever since Arkansas enacted a statewide mandate in 2011. After weekly fines began in 2016, the water system unsuccessfully challenged the fluoride mandate in state court, then lost again on appeal.
Anderson, who has chaired the water system鈥檚 board since 2007, said he would like to challenge the fluoride mandate in court again and would argue the case himself if necessary. In a phone interview, Anderson said he believes that fluoride can hamper the brain and body to the point of making people 鈥済et fat and lazy.鈥
鈥淪o if you go out in the streets these days, walk down the streets, you鈥檒l see lots of fat people wearing their pajamas out in public,鈥 he said.

Nearby in the tiny, no-stoplight community of Leslie, Arkansas, which gets water from the Ozark system, the only dentist in town operates out of a one-man clinic tucked in the back of an antique store. Hand-painted lettering on the store window advertises a 鈥減retty good dentist.鈥
James Flanagin, a third-generation dentist who opened this clinic three years ago, said he was drawn to Leslie by the quaint charms and friendly smiles of small-town life. But those same smiles also reveal the unmistakable consequences of refusing to fluoridate, he said.
鈥淭here is no doubt that there is more dental decay here than there would otherwise be,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou are going to have more decay if your water is not fluoridated. That鈥檚 just a fact.鈥

Fluoride Seen as a Great Public Health Achievement
Fluoride was first added to public water in an American city in 1945 and spread to half of the U.S. population by 1980, according to the CDC. Because of 鈥渢he dramatic decline鈥 in cavities that followed, in 1999 the CDC dubbed fluoridation as one of of the 20th century.
Currently more than 70% of the U.S. population on public water systems get fluoridated water, with a recommended concentration of 0.7 milligrams per liter, or about three drops in a 55-gallon barrel, according to the CDC.
Fluoride is also present in modern toothpaste, mouthwash, dental varnish, and 鈥 like raisins, potatoes, oatmeal, coffee, and black tea. But several dental experts said these products do not reliably reach as many low-income families as drinking water, which has an additional benefit over toothpaste of strengthening children鈥檚 teeth from within as they grow.
Two recent polls have found that the largest share of Americans support fluoridation, but a sizable minority does not. Polls from and found that 48% and 40% of respondents wanted to keep fluoride in public water supplies, while 29% and 26% supported its removal.
Chelsea Fosse, an expert on oral health policy at the , said she worried that misguided fears of fluoride would cause many people to stop using fluoridated toothpaste and varnish just as Medicaid cuts made it harder to see a dentist.
The combination, she said, could be 鈥渄evastating.鈥
鈥淚t will be visibly apparent what this does to the prevalence of tooth decay,鈥 Fosse said. 鈥淚f we get rid of water fluoridation, if we make Medicaid cuts, and if we don鈥檛 support providers in locating and serving the highest-need populations, I truly don鈥檛 know what we will do.鈥
Multiple peer-reviewed studies have shown what ending water fluoridation could look like. In the past few years, studies of cities in and have shown that communities that stopped fluoridation saw significant increases in children鈥檚 cavities when compared with similar cities that did not. A 2024 reported a 鈥渢wo-fold increase鈥 in dental treatments for kids within five years after the country stopped fluoridating in 2014.
Despite the benefits of fluoridation, it has been fiercely opposed by some since its inception, said Catherine Hayes, a Harvard dental expert who advises the American Dental Association on fluoride and has studied its use for three decades.
Fluoridation was initially smeared as a communist plot against America, Hayes said, and then later fears arose of possible links to cancer, which were refuted through extensive scientific research. In the 鈥80s, hysteria fueled fears of fluoride causing AIDS, which was 鈥渓udicrous,鈥 Hayes said.
More recently, the anti-fluoride movement seized on international research that suggests high levels of fluoride can hinder children鈥檚 brain development and has been boosted by high-profile legal and political victories.
Last August, a hotly debated report from the National Institutes of Health鈥檚 found 鈥溾 that exposure to levels of fluoride that are higher than what is present in American drinking water is associated with lower IQ in children. The report was based on an analysis of 74 studies conducted in other countries, most of which were considered 鈥渓ow quality鈥 and involved exposure of at least 1.5 milligrams of fluoride per liter of water 鈥 or more than twice the U.S. recommendation 鈥 according to the program.
The following month, in a long-simmering lawsuit filed by fluoride opponents, a the possible link between fluoride and lowered IQ was too risky to ignore, then ordered the federal Environmental Protection Agency to take nonspecified steps to lower that risk. The EPA started to appeal this ruling in the final days of the Biden administration, but the Trump administration could reverse course.
The EPA and Department of Justice declined to comment. The White House and Department of Health and Human Services did not respond to questions about fluoride.
Despite the National Toxicology Program鈥檚 report, Hayes said, no association has been shown to date between lowered IQ and the amount of fluoride actually present in most Americans鈥 water. The court ruling may prompt additional research conducted in the U.S., Hayes said, which she hoped would finally put the campaign against fluoride to rest.
鈥淚t鈥檚 one of the great mysteries of my career, what sustains it,鈥 Hayes said. 鈥淲hat concerns me is that there鈥檚 some belief amongst some members of the public 鈥 and some of our policymakers 鈥 that there is some truth to this.鈥
Not all experts were so dismissive of the toxicology program鈥檚 report. Bruce Lanphear, a children鈥檚 health researcher at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia, in January that said the findings should prompt health organizations 鈥渢o reassess the risks and benefits of fluoride, particularly for pregnant women and infants.鈥
鈥淭he people who are proposing fluoridation need to now prove it’s safe,鈥 Lanphear . “That’s what this study does. It shifts the burden of proof 鈥 or it should.鈥

Cities and States Rethink Fluoride
At least 14 states so far this year have considered or are considering bills that would lift fluoride mandates or prohibit fluoride in drinking water altogether. In February, Utah lawmakers passed the nation鈥檚 first ban, which Republican he intends to sign. And both Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo and Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller have called for their respective states to end fluoridation.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 want Big Brother telling me what to do,鈥 Miller in February. 鈥淕overnment has forced this on us for too long.鈥
Additionally, dozens of cities and counties have decided to stop fluoridation in the past six months 鈥 including at least 16 communities in Florida with a combined population of more than 1.6 million 鈥 according to news reports and the , an anti-fluoride group.
Stuart Cooper, executive director of that group, said the movement鈥檚 unprecedented momentum would be further supercharged if Kennedy and the Trump administration follow through on a recommendation against fluoride.
Cooper predicted that most U.S. communities will have stopped fluoridating within years.
鈥淚 think what you are seeing in Florida, where every community is falling like dominoes, is going to now happen in the United States,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 think we鈥檙e seeing the absolute end of it.鈥
If Cooper鈥檚 prediction is right, Hayes said, widespread decay would be visible within years. Kids鈥 teeth will rot in their mouths, she said, even though 鈥渨e know how to completely prevent it.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 unnecessary pain and suffering,鈥 Hayes said. 鈥淚f you go into any children鈥檚 hospital across this country, you鈥檒l see a waiting list of kids to get into the operating room to get their teeth fixed because they have severe decay because they haven鈥檛 had access to either fluoridated water or other types of fluoride. Unfortunately, that鈥檚 just going to get worse.鈥
Methodology: How We Counted
This 麻豆女优 Health News article identifies communities with an elevated risk of tooth decay by combining data on areas with dentist shortages and unfluoridated drinking water. Our analysis merged Harvard University research on dentist-shortage areas with large datasets on public water systems published by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The determined that nearly 25 million Americans live in dentist-shortage areas that span much of rural America. The details the populations served and fluoridation status of more than 38,000 public water systems in 37 states. We classified counties as having elevated risk of tooth decay if they met three criteria:
More than half of the residents live in a dentist-shortage area identified by Harvard.
The number of people receiving unfluoridated water from water systems based in that county amounts to more than half of the .
The number of people receiving unfluoridated water from water systems based in that county amounts to at least half of the total population of all water systems based in that county, even if those systems reached beyond the county borders, which many do.
Our analysis identified approximately 230 counties that meet these criteria, meaning they have both a dire shortage of dentists and largely unfluoridated drinking water.
But this total is certainly an undercount. Thirteen states do not report water system data to the CDC, and the agency data does not include private wells, most of which are unfluoridated.
麻豆女优 Health News data editor Holly K. Hacker contributed to this article.