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Government Forced to Admit No One Has Died From Raw Milk

Submitted by on November 17, 2011 – 4:50 pm3 Comments

The CDC has admitted that those it said died from raw milk over the last ten years did not die from raw milk. So is raw milk safe? Well that depends. It’s safe to drink but if you produce or distribute it the government may show up with weapons drawn and eventually someone will get shot and die.

~Health Freedoms

 

In this age of the Internet, it’s amazing how quickly certain statistics can catch on.

Take the statistic I came up with in my Feb. 11 post, after having assessed data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control–that there have been on average 39 illnesses from raw milk cheese between 2000 and 2008. It’s the first time I’m aware of that anyone has presented the data that way.

Within days, National Public Radio had a story about the controversy over raw milk cheese, and included this statement, “On average, about 40 people report getting sick from raw milk cheese a year nationwide, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.” The idea was to suggest that raw milk cheese doesn’t seem to present a huge public health problem.

There’s another related number that has been around much longer, and it’s this: Between 1998 and 2008, there have been two deaths from raw milk. This number comes up repeatedly in media reporting about raw milk, courtesy of the CDC, even though I have reported that those illnesses appear to have come from queso fresco cheese, a soft fresh cheese that isn’t legal under FDA regulations requiring a minimum 60 day aging period.

The CDC hasn’t responded…till now. It all came about as a result of an inquiry made by Mark McAfee, the owner of Organic Pastures Dairy Co., in December, when he challenged claims on the Centers for Disease Control web site stating that raw milk is dangerous. The agency actually agreed to make some slight changes to its language on the site, but when he inquired about statistics concerning raw milk illnesses in California, an official with the agency’s Division of Foodborne, Waterborne and Parasitic Diseases, Janell Routh, stated in part. “From 1998-2008, more outbreaks associated with unpasteurized dairy in California than in any other state (13). There was 1 death reported in that time, from Salmonella Typhimurium.”

McAfee expressed surprise about the death. The state wasn’t reporting it, he said. His requests to Dr. Routh for more information went unanswered. Finally, he threatened to file a Freedom of Information Act request.

An answer came back last week from an unnamed official of the CDC’s information office (cdcinfo@cdc.gov): “The death mentioned in an earlier email was from an unpasteurized dairy product, queso fresco, made from raw milk.”

Why is this important? Because statistics have become important weapons in the war over food rights. When the CDC says there have been two deaths from raw milk between 1998 and 2008, that statistic carries a powerful message: you can die from drinking raw milk.

Now all the CDC has to do is admit the second death was from the same cause.

If it turns out that the two people it says died from drinking raw milk didn’t, in fact, die from drinking raw milk, then the CDC has lost an important weapon in the government’s campaign of fear around raw milk. If no one died in that eleven-year period, suddenly, raw milk isn’t quite the danger it has been made to appear. 

It will be interesting to see how long the CDC will continue to hold onto its treasured statistics in its media handouts.

 

 

Source:

http://www.thecompletepatient.com/journal/2011/2/18/the-power-of-numbers-in-the-war-over-raw-dairy-how-the-cdc-c.html

3 Comments »

  • Paul Fratianni says:

    It is interesting that since I have been in nice France I have eat about 5 times more cheese than I normally do but without the excessive mucus reaction I tend to get. My friend assures me that cheese products in France are Not pasteurized. This personal experience leads me to beg the question that even if there were illnesses associated with raw milk products, which is questionable, what are the number of deaths associated with eating enzyme deficient pasteurized products? I’m sure it is so much so greater that if people knew the truth they’d be outraged and wonder what the hell our government is trying to do.

  • Raven Cohan says:

    I don’t drink any milk from cows or any other animal, but hurray for this great happening for those of you who like your cow juice!

  • bawb says:

    We are the only species on Earth that continues to consume milk beyond infancy and early childhood. Sorry milk industry, the truth is we don’t milk at all.

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