Tuesday 12 July 2011

Milk-Token-Withdrawal:

Early-years', immediate-concern:

Addressing the department of work and pensions' and other associations' working in partnership with social-benefits' for the poorer members of society:

National-Graphical-Statistics' legislation's', in relation to basic oral hygiene, placing a complaint to the department of work and pensions' and other working partnerships', in association with social-benefits-for the more poorer members of society.

Being re-directed to the houses' of Parliaments for review and to re-examine the national data-base, in relation to the amount of effective tooth decay, that is highly prevalent in children across Britain, today.

With the on-set of statistical advances', of data-base gatherings', in children above the age of seven, with the on-set of progressive deterioration's', the average body of statistics', would then be pointing in the direction and correlate with factual-scientific-accounting's', that the withdrawal of milk-tokens from this age, would then be, a direct result of the lack of milk substitute, until the age of maturity, ranging from 11 onwards', advancing, we would state generally....

And that, with additional support for lessor income families', and or working tax credited families', the benefit of milk until the advances of tooth maturity would see, within, one year-to-three years', a huge drop in national statistic tooth decay on average.

But theres' an additional error, that needs to be taken into consideration, that even when there is an advancing in the up-rise of healthy teeth, with a new implementation of standard healthy for the nation, to save the national health services', also millions of monetary funding, that can be better spent elsewhere, millions of pounds on a yearly bases', the contracted milk tokens would have to effectively stay in one place, until the stated age of 12 years', when calcium in firmly set.

Why?

Because, with the again, or choice of again, withdrawal of such vital nutrients-minerals and calcium's', would, stating the obvious, would see a sudden decline in tooth de-cay once again.

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