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FDA and CDC Bias Against Raw Milk--
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| SOURCE | ILLNESSES | %TOTAL | OUTBREAKS | %TOTAL |
| Produce | 31,496 | 38% | 639 | 22% |
| Poultry | 16,280 | 20% | 541 | 18% |
| Beef | 13,220 | 16% | 467 | 16% |
| Eggs | 11,027 | 13% | 341 | 9% |
| Seafood | 9,969 | 12% | 984 | 33% |
According to Robert Tauxe, CDC Chief of the Foodborne and Diarrhreal Diseases Branch, foodborne pathogens such as Campylobacter, E. Coli O157:H7, Y. enterocolitica, Cryptosporidium, and Listeria, have only emerged with in the past twenty-five years. In contrast, the five pathogens which plagued the early decades of the 1900's when pasteurization was implemented, Brucella, Clostridium botulinum, Salmonella typhi, Trichinella, and V. cholerae, all combined account for only 0.01% of foodborne illnesses today. Most of those are associated with foreign travel.
Tauxe reports that 13 recently emerged pathogens are responsible for a majority of the 76 million cases of foodborne illness, 323,000 hospitalizations, and 5,000 deaths annually. It is estimated that 1 in 4 Americans experiences a foodborne illness each year. The following are some major pathogens and their cases per year:
Campylobacter 1,963,000
Salmonella 1,342,000
E.Coli O157:H7 92,000
Y.enterocolitica 87,000
Listeria 2,000
The majority of foodborne illness is caused by Norwalk-like viruses (noroviruses), which account for an estimated 9,200,000 cases per year. These viruses are resistant to both freezing and high temperatures. CDC currently does not conduct active surveillance to monitor outbreaks of gastroenteritis cause by noroviruses.
Overuse and misuse of antibiotics, crowded feedlots, low-quality and low-cost feed are common elements of industrial agriculture. New foodborne pathogens have emerged from this model and according to Robert Tauxe, more are expected. Campylobacter, Salmonella, enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (including O157:H7), and Listeria, are the most economically important pathogens, costing the U.S. over $7 billion annually. Globalization of the food supply has led to difficulty in the control of foodborne infections.
PASTEURIZED milk has been the source of many widespread outbreaks. A total for some of the documented outbreaks due to PASTEURIZED milk over the past few decades is 239,884 cases and 620 deaths.
The nation's largest recorded outbreak of Salmonella was due to PASTEURIZED milk contaminated with antibiotic-resistant Salmonella typhimurium. The outbreak, which occurred between June 1984 and April 1985 sickened over 200,000 and caused 18 deaths. Disturbingly, the CDC did not issue a specific Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report for this outbreak; information must be gleaned from other reports published in the FDA Consumer and the Journal of the American Medical Association.
A 2004 outbreak in Pennsylvania and New Jersey involved multidrug-resistant Salmonella typhimurium infection from milk contaminated after pasteurization.
Despite numerous outbreaks due to pasteurized milk, neither the FDA nor the CDC has ever issued a warning against consuming pasteurized milk. Pasteurization is not a guarantee; pasteurized milk is not sterile. The FDA permits the presence of up to 20,000 bacteria /ml and 10 E.coli/ml in milk after the pasteurization process has been completed.
Because pasteurization destroys probiotics (good bacteria), any harmful bacteria present in the milk after pasteurization can and will flourish. On the other hand, published research shows that good bacteria and many other components in raw milk actually destroy pathogens added to the milk.
The FDA/CDC reminder claims that "numerous studies" show no nutritional difference between raw and pasteurized milk. The reference provided for these "numerous studies" is a single 1984 article, "Unpasteurized milk: a health fetish," by Dr. ME Potter, in which Potter creatively misinterprets a 1946 study Dr. Francis Pottenger conducted for a dental journal. Dr. Francis Pottenger's studies on cats showed that feeding of pasteurized milk to cats resulted in widespread disease leading to infertility and early death by the third generation; cats fed raw milk remained disease-free and healthy throughout the length of the experiment, which lasted for several generations.
The FDA/CDC "reminder" provides no additional references on the comparative nutritional benefits of raw and pasteurized milk. Requests to the FDA for additional references have not been answered.
A 2006 study published the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology reported that childhood consumption of unpasteurized milk resulted in large reductions in the incidence of asthma, eczema and hay fever. Blood tests revealed that drinking raw milk cuts levels of histamine, a chemical produced by the cells in response to an allergen, by more than 50 percent. This study corroborates numerous reports of asthma in children--a life-threatening condition that is increasing in frequency--clearing up after the introduction of raw milk into the diet.
By contrast, several studies have linked asthma and allergies with the consumption of pasteurized milk. Increasing intolerance to processed milk explains the relentless decline in processed milk consumption in the US, at 1 percent per year. "Fewer and fewer people can tolerate commercial milk," states Fallon. "Pasteurization distorts the delicate protein compounds in milk. The body recognizes these warped components as foreign and mounts an energy-sapping immune response."
Animal and human studies carried out in the early part of the century showed that raw milk was superior to pasteurized in building strong bones and teeth, promoting optimal growth and development, and protecting against disease.
Many scientists are now wondering we are becoming immunosuppressed by sterile food. Research has demonstrated that a gut lined with healthy bacteria, called probiotics, can resist pathogens through a process known as competitive exclusion. As gastrointestinal bacteria compete for available nutrients, a healthy supply of probiotics will prevent pathogenic bacteria from thriving. Studies have shown that some probiotics will emit an antimicrobial compound to eliminate competitive bacteria and that other probiotics will produce a traditional antibiotic toxic enough to kill E. coli O157:H7 and Salmonella.
Recent studies on raw milk have revealed numerous anti-microbial and immune stimulating factors that program the growing child for life against infection and allergies. These components are destroyed by pasteurization. Raw milk also contains good bacteria that populate the gut and keep pathogens at bay. "Scientists are only beginning to appreciate the role of beneficial bacteria in our food and in our intestinal tracts," says Fallon. "The anti-microbial paradigm of medicine has been completely discredited; laws mandating pasteurization are based on 40-year-old science."
Germ phobia has led to a reduction in probiotics found in foods like clean raw milk from grass-fed cows. Many consumers have realized the health benefits of raw milk, which is driving a trend.
Demand for raw milk is growing rapidly--by some estimates at 40 percent per year. Raw milk is available in retail establishments in eight states and at the farm gate in many more. In states where raw milk sales are illegal, consumers are obtaining raw milk through cow share and herd share programs. A recent court decision validated the legality of cow share agreements in the state of Ohio.
As consumers grow increasingly concerned about food quality and safety, the demand for local foods has grown rapidly. Multi-state outbreaks (such as last fall's E. coli tainted spinach and the more recent Salmonella outbreak due to peanut butter) demonstrate the problems of a centralized food supply. The FDA has recently reported that it may never know the source of the E. coli that contaminated the spinach and warns it will happen again. If such a problem should arise from a local food, such as raw milk, the source of illness could be more easily identified and contained.
Many farmers are transitioning to direct sales of raw milk because of the increased income such sales provide. Farmers selling their milk to dairy companies in the conventional system receive about $1 per gallon for their product--about the same price farmers received during World War II. Farmers selling raw milk receive between $4 and $13 per gallon.
"Raw milk is where organics was twenty years ago," says Fallon. "Considered a fringe movement, raw milk is poised to enter the mainstream. In another twenty years, raw milk will be the milk of choice for most Americans."
REFERENCES:
Health and Safety Benefits of Raw Milk: http://realmilk.com/ppt/index.html
Comments on "Unpasteurized milk: a health fetish": http://realmilk.com/schmid_healthfetish.html
Unpasteurized milk prevents allergies and asthma:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=pubmed&cmd=Retrieve&dopt=
AbstractPlus&list_uids=16751000&query_hl=15&itool=pubmed_docsum
Campylobacter 1983 – NO pathogen in the milk! 57 illnesses:
http://www.cdc.gov/MMWR/preview/mmwrhtml/00000104.htm
http://www.fda.gov/oc/po/firmrecalls/stumpacres03_07.html
Pasteurized Milk Ordinance: http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~ear/pmo01-2.html (PMO)
2004 Multi-Drug Resistant Outbreak: http://www.cdc.gov/Ncidod/eid/vol10no5/03-0484.htm.
CDC Norovirus Fact Sheet: http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvrd/revb/gastro/norovirus-factsheet.htm.
Foodborne pathogens: Tauxe RV. Emerging Foodborne Pathogens. International Journal of Food Microbiology 78(2002) 31-41;Calloway TR and others. Preslaughter intervention strategies to reduce food-borne pathogens in food animals. J Anim Sci 2003 81(E Suppl 2):E17-E23.
Good bacteria and other components kill pathogens in raw milk: Doyle,
et al. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 1982;44(5):1154-58;
Diker KS. Mikrobiyol Bul 1987 Jul;21(3):200-5; Life Science
2000 66(25):2433-9; Indian Journal of Experimental Biology 1998;36:808-11;
Hygiene (London) 1985 Feb;94(1):31-44.
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