Lithiation of drinking water to fight crime.

nelg

Veteran
Perhaps it is a better idea than adding floride.

Lithium in drinking water and the incidences of crimes, suicides, and arrests related to drug addictions.

Schrauzer GN, Shrestha KP.

Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California at San Diego, Revelle College, La Jolla 92093.

Using data for 27 Texas counties from 1978-1987, it is shown that the incidence rates of suicide, homicide, and rape are significantly higher in counties whose drinking water supplies contain little or no lithium than in counties with water lithium levels ranging from 70-170 micrograms/L; the differences remain statistically significant (p less than 0.01) after corrections for population density. The corresponding associations with the incidence rates of robbery, burglary, and theft were statistically significant with p less than 0.05. These results suggest that lithium has moderating effects on suicidal and violent criminal behavior at levels that may be encountered in municipal water supplies. Comparisons of drinking water lithium levels, in the respective Texas counties, with the incidences of arrests for possession of opium, cocaine, and their derivatives (morphine, heroin, and codeine) from 1981-1986 also produced statistically significant inverse associations, whereas no significant or consistent associations were observed with the reported arrest rates for possession of marijuana, driving under the influence of alcohol, and drunkenness. These results suggest that lithium at low dosage levels has a generally beneficial effect on human behavior, which may be associated with the functions of lithium as a nutritionally-essential trace element. Subject to confirmation by controlled experiments with high-risk populations, increasing the human lithium intakes by supplementation, or the lithiation of drinking water is suggested as a possible means of crime, suicide, and drug-dependency reduction at the individual and community level.

For further reading..
http://www.tahoma-clinic.com/lithium1.shtml
http://www.tahoma-clinic.com/lithium2.shtml
 
Wow! So crime depends on what chemicals we ingest!
Find the right mix and we have world peace! :devilish: And lots of inappropriately timed sex!
 
some chemicals are considered drugs and you can get jailtime for using them, and the others they put in your water supply without an @opt out@ option... the beauty of modern life :)
 
RussSchultz said:
I'm not sure I really like that idea.

Sounds a bit too...big brother-ish to me.

I agree but if there was a plebiscite to chose ether fluoride or lithium I would chose the latter. Assuming of course it was a strict either or question.
 
Druga Runda said:
some chemicals are considered drugs and you can get jailtime for using them, and the others they put in your water supply without an @opt out@ option... the beauty of modern life :)

Lithium has only recently started being considered as an trace element possibly essential to human life. But there is a big difference between supplementing something that is thought to be needed and use of drugs for pleasure. Besides, we are talking about someone suggesting lithiation of drinking water, that's pretty darned far from any sort of wide scale implementation.

A bit of googling turns up at least a reputable source and descriptions of more articles by one of the authors.(the links above 1) have lithium for sale, 2) are written by some dude who's been taking lithium "supplements" since ages ago, long before there was much evidence to suggest this being a clever idea.)

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=PubMed&cmd=Search&term="Shrestha+KP"[Author]

I don't know what publication these articles where featured in, but to get any sort of quality control(because everyone can't be an expert in every field) it ought to be peer reviewed. I'm not quite sure if this is the case. But in any case, there are plenty of articles published without peer review by the authors themselves(even worse, sometimes in book form), these are the sort of studies people who want to sell you crap tend to reference to so it never hurts to be a little carefull.
 
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