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The "Milk Is Milk" Industry Campaign Threatens Public Health
The Cancer Prevention Coalition
and Organic Consumers Association today released the following statement by
Samuel S. Epstein, M.D., professor emeritus, Environmental & Occupational
Medicine, University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public Health;
Chairman, Cancer Prevention Coalition; and Ronnie Cummins, National
Director, Organic Consumers Association.
Last month, the Hudson Institute's agribusiness-funded Center for
Global Food Issues launched an aggressive "Milk is Milk" campaign to assure
consumers that there is no difference between natural milk and that from
cows injected with Monsanto's genetically-engineered or recombinant Bovine
Growth Hormone (rBGH ) to increase milk production and profitability.
This
campaign is also aimed at preventing organic dairy farmers and retailers
from making "false or misleading claims to be hormone-free, (and)
nutritional and animal welfare perceptions, such as happier cows."
Responding to Hudson's complaints, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
announced that it will take action against such misleading marketing
practices.
However, contrary to Hudson, there is a wealth of scientific
information on the toxic veterinary effects of rBGH, major differences
between rBGH and natural milk, and cancer risks posed by rBGH milk.
Revealingly, Hudson uses the term rBST, recombinant Bovine Somatotropin,
avoiding any reference to the word"Hormone" in Monsanto's original acronym
rBGH.
Cows hyper-stimulated by repeated rBGH injections are seriously
stressed. Such evidence, detailed in confidential Monsanto files submitted
to the FDA in 1987, was anonymously leaked to one of us (Epstein) in
November 1989. These files revealed widespread pathological lesions,
infertility, and chronic mastitis, treated with illegal antibiotics.
Acting
on this information, in 1990 the House Committee on Government Operations
charged"that Monsanto and the FDA have chosen to suppress and manipulate
animal health test data--in efforts to approve commercial use" of rBGH. This
charge is also consistent with the Committee's 1986 report,"Human Food
Safety and the Regulation of Animal Drugs."
This concluded that the "FDA has
consistently disregarded its responsibility--has repeatedly put what it
perceives are interests of veterinarians and the livestock industry ahead of
its legal obligation to protect consumers--jeopardizing the health and
safety of consumers of meat, milk and poultry."
By 1994, when FDA approved the use of rBGH under Monsanto's trade
name Posilac, the label insert, seen only by dairy farmers, admitted that
"its use is associated with increased frequency of use of medication in cows
for mastitis, "and some 20 other toxic effects.
Such information on the
Posilac label is clearly inconsistent with Hudson's criticism of "happier
cow" claims by organic dairy farmers.
Also contrary to Hudson, rBGH milk differs qualitatively and
quantitatively from natural milk. Fat levels, particularly long chain
saturated fatty acids incriminated in heart disease, are increased, while
levels of a thyroid hormone enzyme are increased.
Furthermore, the high
incidence of chronic mastitis in rBGH injected cows results in contamination
of their milk with pus, and with antibiotics used to treat the infection,
with risks of allergic reactions and nationwide antibiotic resistance.
Less
well recognized is contamination of rBGH milk with the hormone itself, and
immunological evidence of absorption of the hormone from the intestine.
Even more seriously, rBGH milk is contaminated with high levels of
the natural Insulin-like Growth Factor-1 (IGF-1), which regulates cell
growth, division and multiplication throughout life, particularly in infants
and young children; Eli Lilly, in its application for registration of rBGH,
admitted that IGF-1 blood levels of injected cows are increased up to
ten-fold. IGF-1 is resistant to pasteurization and digestion, and is readily
absorbed from the small intestine.
Monsanto's own data revealed that feeding
IGF-1 to adult rats for only two weeks significantly increased body and
liver weights, and bone length.
More critically, increased IGF-1 blood levels have been incriminated
as a major cause of cancer. IGF-1 induces uncontrolled growth of normal
human breast cells in tissue culture, and has been incriminated in their
transformation to cancer cells. Some 30 publications, dating back to 1985,
have reported strong associations between increased IGF-1 blood levels with
increased risks of colon, and breast cancers.
A 1998 study, based on 300
healthy nurses, showed that elevated IGF-1 blood levels are strongly
associated with up to a seven-fold increased risk of developing
premenopausal breast cancer. This is the highest known risk, approximating
to that of a strong family history. More recent studies have also shown
strong associations between increased IGF-1 blood levels and prostate
cancer.
Of related concern is evidence that elevated IGF-1 levels inhibit the
body's normal ability to protect itself from microscopic cancers by the
natural process of programmed cell destruction, known as "apoptosis."
This
promotes the growth and invasiveness of early cancers, and also decreases
their responsiveness to chemotherapy.
Acting on this cumulative evidence, a 1999 European Commission report
by a team of internationally recognized experts concluded: "Avoidance of
rBGH dairy products in favor of natural products would appear to be the most
practical and immediate dietary intervention to . . . (achieve) the goal of
preventing cancer."
Furthermore, this warning has been endorsed (in our 2002
publication in a leading scientific journal) by over 100 leading independent
experts in cancer prevention and public health, besides citizen activist
groups.
This endorsement was coupled with insistence that the public has an
absolute right-to-know of information on avoidable causes of cancer, a
democratic right which the agribusiness and FDA continue to subvert.
MEDIA CONTACTS
Samuel S. Epstein, M.D., professor emeritus Environmental &
Occupational Medicine, University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public
Health, and Chairman, Cancer Prevention Coalition, 2121 West Taylor Street
MC 922, Chicago, IL 60612; phone 3 12-996-2297; e-mail epstein@uic.edu; web
www.preventcancer.com.
Ronnie Cummins, National Director, Organic Consumers Association,
6101 Cliff Estate Road, Little Marais, MN 55614; phone 218-226-4164; e-mail
ronnie@organicconsumers.org; web www.organicconsumers.org.
Contact Information:
Samuel S. Epstein, M.D., 312-996-2297
- - - - - - - - - -
This news release was originally issued by the Cancer Prevention
Coalition and is distributed by AScribe, The Public Interest Newswire.
Questions or comments regarding the information contained in this release
should be addressed solely to the originating organization.
Media Contact: Samuel S. Epstein, M.D., 312-996-2297
http://www.ascribe.org/cgi-bin/behold.pl?ascribeid=20050204.071705&time=08
2/05
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