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Date: | Sat, 25 Aug 2007 09:27:16 -0500 |
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I have apologized to Valerie directly for misrepresenting her. What I
remembered from our discussion was that probiotics sold for infants
were GMO. The remainder of my post, about dairy-free lactobacillus
cultures, was my own opinion and not hers. Here are her comments on
the current discussion:
>
> Hi Lynn,
> I read your Lactnet post on probiotics and was a little surprised by
> your comments. I think you either misunderstood my comments to you in
> our email discussion or I wrote it in such a way that you
> misunderstood me.
>
> At this point in time, I wouldn't trust that you can find any
> probiotic bacteria that is not gmo. Even companies that proclaim no
> gmo maybe falsely advertising. If the bacteria is cloned, that
> involves genetic engineering. Dairy-free does not avoid genetic
> engineering. Lactobacillus can be GMO. see
> http://www.isis.org.uk/BanGMprobiotics.php
>
> The sugars in human milk are also being gmo'd for use in
> probiotics...so it isn't just the bacteria from breastfed infant
> stools that are being gmo'd.
>
> From my stand point, no infant that is exclusively breastfeed
> (partiuclarly under 6 months of age) should be given probiotics.
> Human milk is probiotics. If adults/children need probiotics they
> would be better off drinking donor human milk or fresh human milk from
> a relative (who has no infectious disease).
>
> Food, supplements, and medicine are being gmo'd at an increasing rate.
> The risks of gmo are now being documented (read "Seeds of Deception"
> by Jefferey Smith). This is new technology and there will be unknown
> risks. Young infants should not be guinea pigs for a supplement
> industry that is not being closely monitored. Exclusive breastfeeding
> should not be tampered with lightly and particularly in regard to
> probiotics. Human milk is prebiotics and probiotics. This is another
> example of the commercialization of human milk components and how it
> is destructive to breastfeeding (interfering with exclusive
> breastfeeding).
>
> I wish that you would forward these comments to Lactnet because I
> think this issue needs clarification. Best wishes, Valerie
>
> Valerie W. McClain, IBCLC
>
My personal opinion is that once a baby has a shredded gut, they aren't
really exclusively breastfed, because of all the intact foreign
proteins that have made it from mom's gut to baby's, and in that case I
still don't hesitate to recommend probiotics to stop the downward
spiral. And I culture my family's own kimchi/salsa/kefir to avoid the
GMOs in commercial probiotics.
Lynn in MO
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