Making Sense of the Milk Moo-stery
October/November 2007
Jaime Netzer
Despite its neutral (some would say delicious) flavor and docile,
decidedly uncontroversial original source, milk has, in recent
years, become a divisive subject. Doctors, organic farmers and
industry officials engage in heated debates about whether Americans
really need to drink milk at all, and, if so,
how much and what kind of milk is
healthiest.
Many of today's dairy cows are injected with a genetically
engineered growth hormone known as
rBGH (recombinant bovine growth hormone).
Organic farmers and other skeptics assert that this milk poses
health risks to humans. Among the purported possible side effects:
an increased chance of colon, prostate and breast cancer.
The
developers of the hormone disagree, stating
that milk from cows injected with artificial hormones is no
different than milk from untreated animals. The FDA approved rBGH
in 1993, though it is banned in both Canada and the European
Union.
The hormone is used to make cows more productive; rBGH increases
production unnaturally by as much as 10-15%. This strain on the
cows often leads to udder infection.
If you're nervous about purchasing milk from hormone-injected cows,
here are other options:
Buy local or regional milk
The easiest way to know the content of your milk is to get it from
a nearby farm where you can ask the producers how they raise their
cows. A simple way to do this is through an independent grocer or
cooperative ? find organic farms, restaurants, and stores near you
at
www.eatwellguide.org and
www.localharvest.org. As an added bonus, local
milk usually tastes better because it hasn't been
ultra-pasteurized.