I wanted to thank Laura Mundt for providing us with the website for the study
on rocket fuel contamination. It's interesting that this study hits the
media on the heels of the AAP Policy on Breastfeeding. A very positive piece
regarding the AAP Policy on Breastfeeding made it into my local newspaper (Daytona
Beach, Florida). Of course this rocket fuel study seems to overshadow the
positive news on breastfeeding.
I felt compelled to read the study and want to offer some comments. First,
the study is called "Perchlorate and Iodide in Dairy and Breast Milk." If the
concern is about infants and their exposure to perchlorate, why isn't infant
formula part of the study? The assumption must be that infant formula does not
need to be evaluated, only cow's milk. This is an interesting assumption
because according to one website I visited "the primary route of exposure is
through the consumption of water containing perchlorate."
http://www.calscience.com/perchlorate.asp
Now let me see how do we make infant formula? An exclusively breastfed
infant may never ingest water until they are 6 months or older. But the formula
fed infant will be getting water, particular since most mothers use either
powdered or concentrated formulas because the ready-to-feed costs so much. So I
would think that logically, exposure should be higher for the infant that has
formula.
The study states that "Breast milk is the sole source of nourishment and
fluid intake for many infants." Where in the USA is breast milk the sole source
of nourishment and fluid intake for infants? Exclusive breastfeeding is a
rarity...its what I call an action so rare that it borders on the extinct.
Of course this study comes from Texas Tech in Lubbock, an agricultural
university. So cow's milk would be a part of the study, not infant formula.
Although there are some adjustments we have to make in making these comparisons.
Testing human milk requires the pooling of samples. Pooling samples reflects
what? The only time infants get pooled human milk is through donor milk
banking.
There is alot to comment about, but I decided to focus in on funding of this
study. Funding was provided in part by Paul Whitfield Horn Professor funds at
TTU,TIEHH CU-1235 and by Dionex Corporation. Dionex makes testing kits that
identify components of chemical mixtures. Their products are used by
environmental, pharmaceutical, chemical, petrochemical, power generation and
electronics industries.
Although Andrea Kirk is called the lead author of the study in a newspaper
article I read, I believe the person in charge of the study is Purnendu K.
Dasgupta, last author listed. I happened to read his CV that is posted on the web
and he has received $12 in federal, state, and private funds. Some of the
private funds come from consulting with Dow Chemical, Dionex, Shell, Eastman
Kodak, Union Carbide, W. R. Grace (company that was sued by 8 families in Woburn
Massachusetts for contaminating ground water in which the families believe
caused leukemias in their families-7 children, 1 adult).
He is the inventor to 15 US Patents. By the way Dow Chemical is also a
biopharmaceutical involved in manufacturing therapeutic proteins (human milk
components are being used to manufacture therapeutic proteins). An interesting
coincidence.
Perchlorate is used in the manufacture of air bag inflators, electronic
tubes, fertilizer, lubricating oils, matches, paints & enamels, photography,
pyrotechnics, rubber. The Department of Defense uses it in explosives and rocket
propellant.
It is I guess a sign of the times that we consider it acceptable science to
consult for the very companies that will be impacted by your studies and
testing. Testing itself, test kits, are an economic opportunity that I don't think
is fully understood by the general public. How do we insure independent
testing? How can we trully understand the environmental issues of infant feeding,
if infant formula is presumed innocent without testing? How can we get good
science, when the right questions aren't being asked? How can we get good
science, when the authors and owners of the testing are consulting for the very
industries who have an enormous stake in the outcome of such research?
Valerie W. McClain, breastfeeding advocate
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