Title: Mercury Reductions in the Dental Sector in Sweden
1Mercury Reductions in the Dental Sector in Sweden
- Eva Sandberg
- Senior Adviser
- International Secretariat
- Swedish Chemicals Agency
2Outline
- Background (brief)- The mercury problem in
Sweden- Swedish policy on mercury- Actions - Dental amalgam phase-out
- Mercury Reductions in the Health Care Sector
(2nd part)
3Europe and the European Union
4Sweden in brief 9 million inhabitants 3 major
urban areas 410 000 km2 total area 240 000 km2
forest land gt100 000 lakes 0.7 tonnes Hg air
emission 4.2 tonnes Hg deposition (mainly from
outside Sweden)
5Mercury is a problem in Sweden
Fish in 50 000 lakes exceeds WHO limit (0.5 mg
Hg/kg).
Levels in forest soil increases and probably
effects important soil microbial functions.
Deposition must be reduced by 80 to reach safe
levels. International action needed.
6Environmental Quality Objective A non-toxic
environmentInterim target regarding mercury
- Newly manufactured finished products will as far
as possible be free from mercury, as soon as
possible, but no later than 2007. - Nor will mercury be used in production processes
unless the company can prove that human health
and the environment will not be harmed. - Finished products already available will be
handled in such a way that mercury is not
released to the environment. - The spread to Sweden by air or water of mercury
will decrease continuously.
7Phase out use in products and processes.
Mercury already in society should be collected
and treated.
Mercury should not be recycled. Mercury should
be safely disposed in a final storage.
No export.
8Swedish actions in brief
- Ban on the sale of fish from certain lakes in the
early 1970s - General recommendation for fish consumption -
Pregnant and breast-feeding women No
consumption- General public Once a week - Reductions of emissions from point sources
- Ban on certain Hg-containing products in 1992
- Export ban entered into force1997
X
9 actions in brief
- Collection of Hg and identification of
Hg-products 1994 1999 - Parliament decision 2003 on final storage of Hg
and Hg-containing waste, latest 2015 - Notification Feb 2006 to EU and WTO of a general
ban on Hg and Hg- containing products (use,
placing on the Swedish market, export and import) - Not yet entered into force
10 Swedish regulation on mercury
- Mercury and its compounds and preparations may
not be exported professionally from Sweden - Certain goods (measuring instruments, electrical
components such as switches, thermostats, relays
and circuit breakers) containing mercury may not
be manufactured or sold or used if not in use
before 1995 - These goods may not be imported from third
countries or exported from Sweden
11Investigation of a national general ban on the
marketing and use of Mercury
- Includes for example dental amalgam, chemicals
and chlor-alkali industry - Proposal to Government 30 June 2004
- Report is available in English at www.kemi.se
12Yearly supply of mercury in products in Sweden
(kg)
13Dental amalgam
- Dental amalgam contains about 50 Hg
- Mercury is released to the environment at several
steps - Risks to the environment and to human health
14Hg
Waste
Waste
Separator
Sewer system
Incineration
Sewage sludge
Hg
Landfill
Land application
Cremation
15Mercury supplied to dental amalgam in Sweden (kg)
US (280 million people) gt30 tonnes Hg (2005) EU
(460 million people) est. 90 tonnes Hg (2005, 25
MS)
16Mercury-free dental fillings
- Dental amalgam has been replaced almost totally
during the last six to seven years in Sweden - Swedish suppliers of dental materials and users
from both public and private sector are the
sources of the used statistics in the new report - Composites are the most commonly used materials
in Sweden
17The shares of dental filling materials used in
Sweden ( by weight)
Glassionomers
13
Amalgam
6
Compomers 3
Composites 78
Ceramics lt1
One kilo of composites will fix many more teeth
than one kilo of amalgam due to the differences
in weight of the materials.
18Amalgam fillings in of total fillings at
Folktandvården in Sweden 2002 and 2003
Source Swedish Board of Health and Welfare
19Success factors
- High awareness of the environmental and health
risks among patients and dentists. - Demand for and access to other filling materials.
- Agreement between the state and the county
councils in 1995 to phase-out use from children's
dentistry. - Since 1999 no financial support given from
Swedish dental insurance for amalgam fillings.
20Thank you for your attention!
Thanks to colleagues Petra Ekblom and Ulla Falk