Reasons Why You
Don’t Want to Drink Pasteurized Milk
“Pasteurization was also found to
affect the hematogenic and growth-promoting properties of the special milk (raw
milk from specially fed cows, whose milk did not produce nutritional
anemia--whereas commercially pasteurized milk did) ...”
-Krauss, W. E.,
Erb, J.H. and Washburn, R. G., Studies on the nutritive value of milk II. The
effect of pasteurization on some of the nutritive properties of milk,” Ohio
Agricultural Experiment Station Bulletin 518, page 11, January, 1933.
“Resistance to tuberculosis
increased in children fed raw milk instead of pasteurized, to the point that in
five years only one case of pulmonary TB had developed, whereas in the previous
five years, when children had been given pasteurized milk, 14 cases of pulmonary
TB had developed.”
-The Lancet,
page 1142, May 8, 1937
“Human or cow milk added to an
equal volume of agar did not support the growth or allowed only slight growth of
B. diphtheriae Staph. aureus, B. coli, B. prodigiosus, B. pyocyaneus, B.
anthracis, streptococci, and unidentified wild yeast. The factors in human milk
inhibiting bacterial growth (‘inhibins’) were inactivated by heating at 56
degrees C. (pasteurization temperatures of 60 to 70 degrees C.) for 30 minutes
or by standing 12 to 24 days at 5 degrees C., but not by repeated freezing and
thawing. The ‘inhibins’ in cow’s milk were not inactivated by heating at
80 degrees C. for seven minutes but were destroyed by heating at 85 degrees C.
for seven minutes. Attempts have not been made to identify the natural
antiseptics.”
-Dold, H.,
Wizaman, E., and Kleiner, C., Z. Hyt. Inf., “Antiseptic in milk,” The Drug
and Cosmetic Industry, 43,1:109, July, 1938.
“Milk, an animal product, is the
essential food of all infant mammals. Mammals are so classified in the scale of
living things because of the common characteristic of the female nursing her
young. The infant mammal is accordingly carnivorous in his natural habits
irrespective of whether the adult of the species is herbivorous or carnivorous.
If the adults on a carnivorous diet
show conditions of deficiency on cooked meat, is it not reasonable to suppose
that growing infants on entirely cooked carnivorous diets will do likewise? Many
experimenters, such as Catel, Dutcher, Wilson, and others, have shown such to be
the case in animals fed on pasteurized milk ...
Can human infants be born of
mothers who are deficient, and yet attain a fair degree of skeletal development
if given a proper raw milk supply? The three infants in figure 4 were born of
mothers known to by hypothyroid. Prior to the birth of the infants shown, all
three mothers had given birth to children within three years. Each of the
previous children was asthmatic, showed infantile rickets, and possessed poor
skeletal development.
The first child shown in Figure 4
was breastfed from birth, with the mother living under excellent
health-promoting conditions. The second child was on powdered milk for four
weeks, and on raw certified milk after that without cod-liver oil or orange
juice. Both the first and second child began supplemental feedings when they
were about five months old and were very healthy babies. The third baby was
always sickly and had been on formulae since birth.
These formulae included powdered
milk, pasteurized milk, boiled milk, boiled certified milk and canned milk. She
had suffered from severe gastric distress during her entire infancy and when
eight months old she developed asthma. She is very small though her parents are
of larger build than the parents of the other two children.
The strictest bacteriologic
standards for milk must always be maintained. The feeding of cattle should
receive greater attention. It should be determined experimentally, if possible,
whether health and resistance are undermined by pasteurization. If so, in our
attempt to protect the child from milk-borne infections, we may be denying his
heritage of good health by removing from his milk vitamins, hormones, and
enzymes that control mineral assimilation and promote body development and
general resistance to disease. Is it also possible that these same elements are
as important to the adult invalid who needs milk as to the infant?
Let us have closer cooperation
between raw-milk producers and public-health officials so that the
growth-producing factors of raw milk can be studied. We cannot afford to
pasteurize milk if it is found that pasteurization diminishes the potency of the
growth-promoting factors that determine the skeletal development of our
children. We cannot afford to lessen the resistance of our children to
respiratory infection, asthma, bronchitis and the common cold when factors
preventing them are present in greater amounts in properly clean raw milk than
in pasteurized milk.”
-Pottenger, F.
M. Jr., “Clinical and experimental evidence of growth factors in raw
milk,” Certified Milk, January, 1937.
“Some have questioned whether
pasteurized milk is really involved in the production of scurvy. The fact,
however, that when one gives a group of infants this food for a period of about
six months, instances of scurvy occur, and that a cure is brought about when raw
milk is substituted, taken in conjunction with the fact that if we feed the same
number of infants on raw milk, cases of scurvy will not develop--these results
seem sufficient to warrant the deduction that pasteurized milk is a causative
factor.
The experience in Berlin, noted by
Newmann (Newmann, H., Deutsch. Klin., 7:341, 1904) and others, is most
illuminating and convincing in this connection. In 1901 a large dairy in that
city established a pasteurizing plant in which all milk was raised to a
temperature of about 60 degrees C. After an interval of some months, infantile
scurvy was reported from various sources throughout the city. Neumann writes
about the situation as follows:
‘Whereas Heubner, Cassel and
myself had seen only 32 cases of scurvy from 1896 to 1900, the number of cases
suddenly rose from the year 1901, so that the same observers--not to mention a
great many others--treated 83cases in 1901 and 1902.’
An investigation was made as to the
cause, and the pasteurization was discontinued. The result was that the number
of cases decreased just as suddenly as they had increased ...”
-Hess, A. F.,
“Infantile Scurvy, V. A study of its pathogenesis,” Am. J Dis. Child.,
November, 1917.
“Although pasteurized milk is to
be recommended on account of the security which it affords against infection, we
should realize that it is an incomplete food. Unless an antiscorbutic, such as
orange juice, … or potato water is added, infants will develop scurvy on this
diet. This form of scurvy takes some months to develop and may be termed
subacute. It must be considered not only the most common form of this disorder,
but the one which passes most often unrecognized. In order to guard against it,
infants fed exclusively on a diet of pasteurized milk should be given
antiscorbutics far earlier than is at present the custom, even as early as at
the end of the first month of life.”
-Hess, A. F.,
“Infantile Scurvy. III. Its influence on growth (length and weight),” Am.
J. Dis. Child., August, 1916.
“One of the most striking
clinical phenomenon of infantile scurvy is the marked susceptibility to
infection which it entails--the frequent attacks of ‘grippe,’ the widespread
occurrence of nasal diphtheria, the furunculosis of the skin, the danger of
pneumonia in advanced cases ...”
-Hess, A. F.,
“Infantile Scurvy. V. A study of its pathogenesis,” Am. J. Dis. Child.,
November, 1917.
“... Recently, Minot and his
colleagues came to the conclusion that adult scurvy can be precipitated by
infectious processes; in other words, that latent scurvy can by this means be
changed to manifest scurvy. In general, therefore, investigations in the
laboratory as well as clinical observations are in agreement in stressing the
interrelationship of scurvy and bacterial infection.”
-Hess, A. F.,
“Recent advances in knowledge of scurvy and the antiscorbutic vitamin,”
J.A.M.A., April 23, 1932.
This illustrates the futility of
pasteurization of milk to prevent infection from diseases the cows may sometimes
have, such as undulant fever. The infant is then made subject to the common
infectious diseases, and deaths from these common diseases are not attributed,
as they should be, to the defective nature of the milk.
Effects of Pasteurization of
Milk on Tooth Health
The Lancet, page 1142, May 8, 1937
says that in children the teeth are less likely to decay on diet supplemented
with raw milk than with pasteurized milk.
“Dr. Evelyn Sprawson of the
London Hospital has recently stated that in certain institutions children who
were brought up on raw milk (as opposed to pasteurized milk) had perfect teeth
and no decay. Whether this was due actually to the milk being unheated, or
possibly to some other, quite different and so far unrecognized cause, we cannot
yet say; but we may be sure of one thing, that the result is so striking and
unusual that it will undoubtedly be made the subject of further inquiry.”
-Harris, L.J.,
Vitamins in Theory and Practice, page 224, Cambridge, University Press, 1935.
Effect of Pasteurization of Milk
on Growth
... Fisher and Bartlett “point
out by statistical treatment that the response in height to raw milk was
significantly greater than that to pasteurized milk. Their interpretation of the
data led to the assertion that the pasteurized milk was only 66 percent
effective as the raw milk in the case of boys and 91.1 percent as effective in
the case of girls in inducing increases in weight, and 50.0 percent as effective
in boys and 70.0 percent in girls in bringing about height increases.”
-Krauss, W. E.,
Erb, J. H. and Washburn, R.G., “Studies on the nutritive value of milk,
II.” “The effect of pasteurization on some of the nutritive properties of
milk,” Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station Bulletin 518, page 8, January
1933.
“... Daniels and Loughlin
observed that young rats fed long heat-treated milks, evaporated, condensed, and
pasteurized by the ‘hold’ method failed to grow normally, but if the
precipitated calcium salts were incorporated into the various milk, growth was
normal ...”
-Daniels, A.L.,
and Loughlin, R., Journal of Biological Chemistry, 44.381, 1920, as abstracted
by Holmes and Pigott, “Factors that influence the anti-rachitic value of
milk in infant feeding,” Oil & Soap, 12.9:202-207, September, 1935.
Calcium Availability in
Pasteurized Milk
“Kramer, Latzke and Shaw (Kramer,
Martha M., Latzke, F., and Shaw, M.M., A Comparison of Raw, Pasteurized,
Evaporated and Dried Milks as Sources of Calcium and Phosphorus for the Human
Subject, Journal of Biological Chemistry, 79:283-295, 1928) obtained less
favorable calcium balances in adults with pasteurized milk than with ‘fresh
milk’ and made the further observation that milk from cows kept in the barn
for five months gave less favorable calcium balances than did ‘fresh milk’
(herd milk from a college dairy).”
-Krauss, W. E.,
Erb, J.H., and Washburn, R.G., “Studies on the nutritive value of milk, II.
The effect of pasteurization on some of the nutritive properties of milk,”
Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station Bulletin 518, page 8, January, 1933.
“Guinea pigs fed raw milk with an
addition of skim milk powder, copper and iron salts, carotene, and orange juice
grew well and showed no abnormalities at autopsy. When pasteurized whole milk
was used, deficiency symptoms began to appear, wrist stiffness being the first
sign. The substitution of skim milk for whole milk intensified the deficiency,
which was characterized by great emaciation and weakness before death … At
autopsy the muscles were found to be extremely atrophied, and closely packed,
fine lines of calcification ran parallel to the fibers. Also calcification
occurred in other parts of the body. When cod liver oil replaced carotene in the
diet, paralysis developed quickly. The feeding of raw cream cured the wrist
stiffness.”
-Annual Review
of Biochemistry, Vol. 18, Page 435. (1944).
In The Lancet, page 1142, May 8,
1937 it is shown that chilblains are practically eliminated (result of higher
calcium values of raw milk or improved assimilation of calcium) when raw milk
rather than pasteurized milk is used in the diet of children.
Pasteurization Destroys Vitamin
A
“... According to S.
Schmidt-Nielsen and Schmidt-Nielson (Kgl. Norske Videnskab. Selsk. Forhandl.,
1:126-128, abstracted in Biological Abstracts, 4:94, 1930), when milk
pasteurized at 63 degrees C. (145 degrees F.) was fed to mature rats, early
death or diminished vitality resulted in the offspring. This was attributed to
the destruction of vitamin A.”
-Krauss, W.E.,
Erb, J.H. and Washburn, R.G. Studies on the nutritive value of milk, II. The
effect of pasteurization on some of the nutritive properties of milk,” Ohio
Agricultural Experiment Station Bulletin 518, page 9, January, 1933.
Pasteurization Destroys Vitamin
B Complex
“Pasteurization of milk destroys
about 38 percent of the B complex according to Dutcher and his associates ...”
-Lewis, L.R.,
The relation of the vitamins to obstetrics, American Journal of Obstetrics and
Gynecology, 29.5:759. May, 1935.
“Mattick and Golding’s
“Relative value of Raw and Heated Milk in Nutrition, in The Lancet
(220:662-667), reported some preliminary experiments which indicated that
pasteurization destroys some of the dietetic value of milk, including partial
destruction of Vitamin B1. These same workers found the raw milk to be
considerably superior to sterilized milk in nutritive value.”
-Krauss, W. E.,
Erb, J. H. and Washburn, R.G., Studies on the nutritive value of milk, II. The
effect of pasteurization on some of the nutritive properties of milk,” Ohio
Agricultural Experiment Station Bulletin 518, page 7, January, 1933.
“... On the 7.5 cc. level two
rats on raw milk developed mild polyneuritis toward the end of the trial;
whereas three rats on pasteurized milk developed polyneuritis early, which
became severe as the trial drew to a close. On the 10.0 cc. level none of the
rats on raw milk developed polyneuritis, but three on pasteurized milk were
severely afflicted.”
-Ibid, page 23.
“Using standard methods for
determining vitamins A, B, G and D, it was found that pasteurization destroyed
at least 25 percent of the vitamin B in the original raw milk.”
-Ibid, page 30.
Pasteurization Destroys Vitamin
C
“... The pasteurization of milk
has been found to destroy 20 percent to 50 percent [of the vitamin C] the first
month of life. The reasonable procedure, therefore, appears to be to use
pasteurized milk to insure protection against disease germs of various kinds and
to supply the vitamin deficiency through other foods. The success in infant
feeding based on this principle is evinced especially in the amazing reduction
in infant mortality in the summer months.”
-Jordan, E.O.,A
Textbook of General Bacteriology, Twelfth Edition, Revised, page 691, W. B.
Saunders Co., 1938.
“Within the past few years an
increasing number of patients affected with scurvy have been brought to the
Oregon Children’s Hospital. As the prophylactic amount of vitamin C (15 mg.
daily) is contained in 300 cc. of breast milk, scurvy is rarely found in
breastfed babies. The vitamin C of cow’s milk is largely destroyed by
pasteurization or evaporation.”
-Overstreet,
R.M., Northwest Medicine, June, 1938, as abstracted by Clinical Medicine and
Surgery, “The Increase of Scurvy,” 42, 12:598, December, 1938.
“Samples of raw, certified ,
certified Guernsey and certified vitamin D milks were collected at the different
dairies throughout the city of Madison. These milks on the average are only a
little below the fresh milks as recorded in Table I, indicating that commercial
raw and certified milks as delivered to the consumer lose only a small amount of
their antiscorbutic potency. Likewise, samples of commercial pasteurized milks
were collected and analyzed. On an average they contained only about one-half as
much ascorbic acid as fresh raw milks and significantly less ascorbic acid than
the commercial unpasteurized milks.
It was found that commercial raw
milks contained an antiscorbutic potency that was only slightly less than fresh
raw milks and that pasteurized milks on the average contained only one-half the
latter potency. Mineral modification and homogenization apparently have a
destructive effect on ascorbic acid.”
-Woessner,
Warren W., Evehjem, C.A., and Schuette, Henry A., “The determination of
ascorbic acid in commercial milks,” Journal of Nutrition, 18,6:619-626,
December, 1939.
Reprint No. 7
Lee Foundation for Nutritional Research
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Publication Date: 12/11/39