JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
What Massachusetts Residents Know about Fluoridation *
Weintraub, Jane A.; Connolly, Gregory N.; Lambert, Craig A.; Douglass, Chester W.
1985-12
Citation:Weintraub, Jane A.; Connolly, Gregory N.; Lambert, Craig A.; Douglass, Chester W. (1985). "What Massachusetts Residents Know about Fluoridation * ." Journal of Public Health Dentistry 45(4): 240-246. <http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/65310>
Abstract: The Massachusetts Department of Public Health conducted a comprehensive, statewide telephone health interview survey during 1980. Adult members of 1,091 households were interviewed. The purpose of this paper is to report the attitudes and knowledge of the Massachusetts residents surveyed regarding fluoridation, as well as the relation of their attitudes with demographic and socioeconomic variables, dental and other health behaviors, and outcome of fluoridation referenda. The majority, 60 percent, were in favor of community water fluoridation. As expected, groups that were most likely to favor fluoridation were parents, those who were better educated, and those with higher incomes. About three-fourths of those surveyed were correctly aware of the purpose of fluoridation. Public opinion about fluoridation, as measured by this survey, did not correspond with the outcome of fluoridation referenda held in 14 Massachusetts communities between 1980 and 1983, which showed that 61 percent of the voters were not in favor of fluoridation.