Oral-B Glide is a PTFE (Teflon) dental floss manufactured by W. L. Gore and Associates exclusively for Procter & Gamble.
History
The origin of Glide (which is what the brand was called prior to the P&G acquisition) dates to 1971, when Bill Gore first used a Gore-Tex fiber to floss his own teeth;[1] Gore-Tex was the PTFE-based fiber he had invented as a "waterproof laminate". The company failed to market the product for more than three decades. Ultimately, it succeeded by marketing to dentists rather than selling the floss as a consumer product. It was widely adopted, and grew to be the #1 brand of floss in dental office use, and #2 floss in retail.[1]
In September 2003, Gore sold the brand to Procter & Gamble, who at the time announced its intention to brand the product under the Crest product line.[2] The terms of the sale provided that Gore would continue to manufacture and develop the product.[3] In 2010, Procter & Gamble rebranded the product as Oral-B Glide.
Popularity and sales
In 2006, Crest Glide was the second-ranked brand of dental floss in the United States, with sales (in supermarkets and drug stores) of $22 million and a market share of 18.8%, just behind Johnson & Johnson Reach.[4]
Environmental and health concerns
Environmentalists have recommended non-PTFE brands, discouraging the use of the environmentally unfriendly Teflon.[5] There is also a health concern given the use of perfluorooctanoic acid, a possible carcinogen, in the making of Teflon.[6] A 2019 study showed that some women who had flossed with Glide had elevated levels of perfluorohexanesulfonic acid (PFHxS) in their blood compared to non-flossers, and fluorine compounds were identified in Glide (as well as 5 other brands of floss out of 18 brands tested).[7] Procter & Gamble, however, disputes this finding.[8] "The study, led by Silent Spring Institute in collaboration with the Public Health Institute in Berkeley, CA, appears online ... in the Journal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology (JESEE), and is part of a special issue dedicated to PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances)."[9]
External links
References
- Tojo Thatchenkery, Carol Metzker. Appreciative intelligence: seeing the mighty oak in the acorn Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2006^
- Sarah Ellison. Procter & Gamble To Buy Glide Floss The Wall Street Journal, September 17, 2003^
- Procter & Gamble to buy Glide floss business September 17, 2003^
- Robert S. Lazich. Market Share Reporter 2007: An Annual Compilation of Reported Market Share Data on Companies, Products, and Services Gale Group, 2007, retrieved February 20, 2010^
- Adria Vasil. All things dental Brush, gargle and floss your way to a naturally clean smile Now, September 1, 2005, retrieved February 20, 2010^
- Adria Vasial. Ecoholic: Your Guide to the Most Environmentally Friendly Information, Products, and Services Norton, 2009^
- Katherine E. Boronow, Julia Green Brody, Laurel A. Schaider, Graham F. Peaslee, Laurie Havas, Barbara A. Cohn. Serum concentrations of PFASs and exposure-related behaviors in African American and non-Hispanic white women Journal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology, January 8, 2019^
- Liam Davenport. Certain Dental Flosses Raise Body Levels of Toxic Chemicals Medscape, WebMD, LLC, retrieved January 22, 2019^
- Dental flossing and other behaviors linked with higher levels of PFAS in the body Silent Spring Institute, January 8, 2019, retrieved June 15, 2019^