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Date: | Mon, 24 Nov 2008 14:49:30 -0500 |
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I'm sorry Diana feels that
"This conversation about the risks in human donor milk makes me feel very sad! I guess
milk from a woman you know isn't necessarily better for a baby than milk from cows
you've never met!"
The fact of the matter is that cows can get TB and all sorts of other diseases that can
make cow's milk quite unsafe. Having drunk fresh milk from cow's, goats, camels and
even llama milk once --- there was always a risk of transmission in that act that I chose
to do consciously. I have never had a positive TB test, but I could have had one.
There is a similar trade off between fresh cow's milk and pasteurized and even the double
and triple pasteurization processes that destroy nutritional value. Quite a while back there
was an expose (probably in the NY Times magazine section) about the organic milk
industry --- whereby the very large companies were using extensive pasteurization to
compensate for shipping milk across the country rather than the more expensive
approach of going through local farms.
We already do have human donor milk banks in place. Just because we don't have the
systems in place yet for routine screening, testing and if deemed necessary local
processing of shared milk doesn't mean that this cannot be created. Nor does it mean
that local doctors can't now screen for all the diseases that could cause problem. If we
know what to screen for in the human donor milk banks, we know what to screen for in
individual women. If we know how to pasteurize cow's milk, we know how to pasteurize
human milk and we do pasteurize it.
Best, Susan Burger.
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