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The Health Benefits Of Raw Milk
From Grass-Fed Animals
By Ron Schmid, ND
In 1970, I went to live on the island of Martha's Vineyard. I was quite
ill with gastrointestinal problems. I began living mostly on seafood,
fresh vegetables and salads, and raw milk and eggs purchased from a local
farmer, with a little meat and whole grain bread. My health problems,
which had been intractable for years, disappeared.
Raw milk remained a mainstay of my diet. Since 1981 I have strongly
recommended raw milk to thousands of people who have seen me in my practice
as a naturopathic physician. I practice in Connecticut, where we enjoy
the right to purchase certified raw milk throughout the state (with the
exception of the town of Fairfield, where a fascist local health board
has instituted an unchallenged-for-lack-of-funds town ordinance prohibiting
the sale of raw milk.)
The raw milk available in the part of Connecticut where I live is from
Debra Tyler's farm in Cornwall Bridge, called "Local Farm." Debra has
nine cows on fourteen acres. Eight health food stores in central and northern
Connecticut pick up milk regularly at Local Farm. There are about a dozen
other certified raw milk dairies among Connecticut's 210 dairy farms.
Debra has Jersey cows. Most farms have Holsteins, which provide large
quantities of milk, but milk that is lower in protein, fat and calcium.
Jerseys were originally bred by the French to produce milk for cheese
making. The fat content of Debra's milk during the warm months is about
4.8 percent, well above the normal 3.5 percent for whole milk. Debra's
cows eat mostly grass in the spring, summer and fall, and mostly hay in
the winter (each cow consumes a forty pound bale a day!), with a few pounds
a day of ground corn and roasted soybeans (five to one corn to soybeans
ratio).
Local Farm milk is certified organic. Certification costs several hundred
dollars a year in fees and considerable paperwork. It also means that
Debra must sometimes pay more for certified feed from faraway places than
for locally produced feed she knows to be organic but which is not certified.
This raises the question—if you know and trust the local farmers who produce
your food, does it really have to be certified?
TESTIMONY ON RAW MILK
The last time the right of the people of Connecticut to purchase raw
milk was seriously threatened was in 1994 when the state Environmental
Committee held public hearings on the certification of raw milk, before
voting almost unanimously to continue licensing new farms and allowing
raw milk to be sold. I testified at those hearings. My testimony was framed
to respond to objections to raw milk raised by the state health department
and to document the benefits of raw milk. To quote from that testimony:
"The state epidemiologist writes that ‘It has yet to be demonstrated
that raw milk has any beneficial health effects. . . ' He cites articles
attached to his letter. In one article, ‘Unpasteurized Milk, The Hazards
of a Health Fetish' (Journal of the American Medical Association,
10/19/84), the authors make a series of misstatements about the research
of Francis Pottenger before concluding that raw milk has no health benefits.
I detail these charges as follows in the paper I've given the members
of the Committee.
"Now what Pottenger actually did in some of his experiments is this.
He used four groups of cats. All received for one-third of the diet
raw meat. The other two-thirds of the diet consisted in either raw milk
or various heat-treated milks. The raw milk/raw meat diet produced many
generations of healthy cats. Those fed pasteurized milk showed skeletal
changes, decreased reproductive capacity and infectious and degenerative
diseases.
"Now just who was Francis Pottenger? He was the son of the physician
who founded the once famous Pottenger Sanatorium for treatment of tuberculosis
in Monrovia, California. He completed his residency at Los Angeles County
Hospital in 1930 and became a full-time assistant at the Sanatorium.
From 1932 to 1942, he also conducted what became known as the Pottenger
Cat Study.
"In 1940, he founded the Francis M Pottenger, Jr. Hospital at Monrovia.
Until closing in 1960, the hospital specialized in treating non-tubercular
diseases of the lung, especially asthma.
"Dr. Pottenger was a regular and prolific contributor to the medical
and scientific literature. He served as president of several professional
organizations, including the Los Angeles County Medical Association,
the American Academy of Applied Nutrition and the American Therapeutic
Society. He was a member of a long list of other professional organizations.
"Pottenger's experiments met the most rigorous scientific standards.
His outstanding credentials earned him the support of prominent physicians.
Alvin Foord, MD, Professor of Pathology at the University of Southern
California and pathologist at the Huntington Memorial Hospital in Pasadena,
co-supervised with Pottenger all pathological and chemical findings
of the study.
"One particular question that Pottenger addressed in his study is one
that modern science has largely ignored. It has to do with the nutritive
value of heat-labile elements—nutrients destroyed by heat and available
only in raw foods.
"In his article ‘Clinical Evidences of the Value of Raw Milk,' Pottenger
writes: ‘Some of the factors transmitted by milk are thermo-labile [sensitive
to heat]. Though their destruction may not produce death, their deficiency
may prevent proper development of the child. This may show in the development
of an inadequate skeleton or a decrease in resistance. . . . delay in
development of osseous centers is noted more frequently in those children.
. . receiving heat treated milk. It is particularly absent from the
raw milk fed children. . . . I am basing this discussion on analysis
of 150 children whose parents have consulted me because of respiratory
allergies. Many other workers. . . have also shown that treating milk
by heating interferes with its proper assimilation and nutritional qualities.
. . . The best milk from a nutritional standpoint is raw milk. . . .
Heat-treating milk interferes with calcium metabolism causing. . . delay
in bone age and small bones. . . . The interference with calcium metabolism
as shown in the bones is only a physiological index of disturbed metabolism
throughout the body.'
"I have prescribed raw milk from grass-fed animals to my patients for
nearly fifteen years. Time and again I have seen allergies clear up
and dramatically improved health. Particularly in children, middle ear
infections usually disappear and do not recur on raw milk. Both children
and adults unable to drink pasteurized milk without problems have thrived
on raw milk. In hundreds—perhaps thousands—of my patients using raw
milk, not one has ever developed a salmonella, campylobacter, or other
raw-milk-related infection.
"In the letter cited above, the state epidemiologist states that ‘The
processes of certification and/or inspection do not guarantee that raw
milk will not be contaminated with pathogenic organisms.' He also lists
a host of microorganisms that are alleged to be transmitted by raw milk,
not mentioning that, as the literature accompanying his letter makes
clear, the only organisms even potentially associated with the consumption
of certified raw milk are salmonella and campylobacter. And in
one of the articles he cites, ‘The Hazard in Consuming Raw Milk' (in
The Western Journal of Medicine), the authors actually state
that ‘Salmonella and campylobacter diseases in humans are generally
not serious. But in persons with compromised health (particularly those
with malignant conditions and immunosuppressed by disease or therapy),
these infections may be serious.'
"So, the gist of the state's argument against certified raw milk is
that it might possibly on isolated occasions cause serious disease in
some people whose immune systems have been compromised by the toxic
effects of chemotherapy. And because of this very slight risk, those
of us who might choose to drink certified raw milk for the benefits
I have catalogued should be denied that right."
Fortunately, the members of the Environmental Committee saw through
the shallowness of the state's argument and voted in favor of raw milk.
Milk in History and Evolution
Not everyone agrees that milk should be part of the human diet after
infancy. The argument is made that just as all other species drink no
milk after weaning, neither should we, especially that of another species.
Many adults have difficulty digesting pasteurized milk, and allergies
to pasteurized milk products are common. While this lends credence to
arguments against milk, such reactions are usually due to pasteurization
itself and the poor quality of conventionally produced milk and milk products.
While for some individuals genetic influences play a role, for most people,
the body's reaction to milk depends largely upon the quality and state
of the particular milk used.
The Swiss of the Loetschental Valley were one of the few native groups
Weston Price studied that used milk. (The others were certain African
tribes, including the Masai.) The Swiss valley-dwellers used raw whole
milk, both fresh and cultured, cheese and butter, all in substantial quantities.
The milk was from healthy, grass-fed animals and was used unpasteurized
and unhomogenized. Such foods clearly can play a major role in a health-building
program for the individual genetically enabled to utilize these foods
well. They are a rich source of fat-soluble vitamins A and D and other
crucial nutrients in short supply in diets lacking in high quality animal
fats. (Contrary to popular opinion, liberal amounts of animal fats, particularly
from grass-fed animals, are essential for good health and resistance to
disease.)
Yet it is possible to attain optimal health without dairy foods. Price
discovered groups using no dairy foods that had complete resistance to
dental decay and chronic disease; their diets invariably included other
rich sources of animal fats, calcium and other minerals. The soft ends
of long bones were commonly chewed, and the shafts and other bones were
used in soups.
Modern medicine has discovered the importance of a substantial intake
of calcium. Several recent studies have linked high blood pressure and
other problems to chronic subclinical calcium deficiency, including increased
incidence of colon and prostate cancers in men and osteoporosis and osteoarthritis
in both men and women. Paradoxically, other problems are associated with
high consumption of dairy foods; this has not gone unnoticed by researchers,
nutritionists and holistic physicians.
The difference between fresh raw milk from grass-fed cows and processed
milk explains the paradox. This concept has not been considered in attempts
by today's medical community to explain the health effects of dairy foods.
Domesticated animals were first used for milk eight to ten thousand
years ago, as a genetic change affecting mostly people in Europe, the
Middle East and parts of Africa enabled them to digest milk as adults.
Milk from domesticated animals then began to become important as a human
food. With domestication and settlement, fewer wild animals were available;
as groups of people roamed less, they hunted less, eating more grains
and vegetables. In some cultures, milk replaced animal bones as the chief
source of calcium and some other minerals.
In indigenous cultures where adults used milk, often it was used as
cultured or clabbered milk. This is similar to homemade raw yogurt, and
it is partially predigested—much of the lactose (milk sugar) has been
broken down by bacterial action. This process must be accomplished over
a period of several hours in the stomach when one drinks fresh milk; yogurt
or clabbered milk is much more easily digested than fresh milk.
Adaptations in evolution are always the effects of particular causes.
Humans developing the ability to digest milk into adulthood possessed
a survival advantage; such changes are the basis of evolution. Put simply,
many human beings evolved the ability to easily digest raw milk because
raw milk from healthy, grass-fed animals gave them an adaptive advantage;
it made them stronger and more able to reproduce. Such milk remains a
wonderful food that provides us with fat-soluble nutrients, calcium and
other minerals that are by and large in short supply in the modern diet.
In the six years since I presented the testimony quoted above, I have
become more convinced than ever of the value and importance of raw milk
in the diets of people of all ages. For many of the people who eat in
the manner I recommend, raw milk is the chief source of enzymes. I believe
enzymes are a critical component in recovering from disease and establishing
and maintaining health. Hundreds of people I've seen have used Local Farm
raw milk as an essential part of their naturopathic treatment.
There isn't a day that goes by that I'm not thankful that I live in
a state where bureaucrats and medical monopolists have not stripped us
of what should be an inalienable, constitutional right. I mean the right
to purchase raw milk and other healthy, locally produced foods directly
from the people who produce them.
It's impossible to overestimate the importance of the work Debra Tyler
and farmers like her are doing. I long to see the day when all Americans
have the right to purchase locally produced raw milk, meat, fowl and other
farm products directly from the farmers who produce them. I hope to see
the day when the current yoke of prohibitions and bureaucratic red tape
will be thrown off, and we once again will be free to produce and consume
truly healthy foods. The men and women who founded this country did not
intend for commercial interests to control the food supply and thus our
health. These are rights of the people, and they are rights that have
been stripped away. We need to work together to regain them.
About Ron Schmid
Dr. Ron Schmid has practiced as a licensed naturopathic physician in
Connecticut since graduating from the National College of Naturopathic
Medicine in 1981. A graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
as well, he has taught courses and seminars in nutrition at all four of
the accredited naturopathic medical schools in the United States. He served
for a year as the first Clinic Director and Chief Medical Officer at the
University of Bridgeport College of Naturopathic Medicine. He is a member
of the American Association of Naturopathic Physicians and the Connecticut
Society of Naturopathic Physicians, and is on the Honorary Board of the
Weston A. Price Foundation.
He is also the manufacturer of 100% pure, additive free nutritional supplements.
Dr. Schmid is the author of Traditional Foods Are Your Best Medicine,
first published in 1986.
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