Do you dispute all of the studies mentioned in this video? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=czm6oBxa6dM&t=14s
I would love to see who funded the studies you refer to.
Do you dispute all of the studies mentioned in this video? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=czm6oBxa6dM&t=14s
That appears to be a video that cherry picks research, that is a tactic of those promoting pseudo-science.Jebus wrote: ↑Wed Aug 08, 2018 10:18 am Do you dispute all of the studies mentioned in this video? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=czm6oBxa6dM&t=14s
I would love to see who funded the studies you refer to.
I think you need to ask yourself a few questions:carnap wrote: ↑Thu Aug 09, 2018 12:15 am That appears to be a video that cherry picks research, that is a tactic of those promoting pseudo-science.
There are a number of studies that have looked at dairy and all-cause mortality and they haven't found any consistent relationship, that is why you won't find a single major health organization demonizing dairy like you're doing here. The only groups that do that are those promoting vegan or plant-based diets. I could cite studies if you'd like, but really there are a lot of them and what matters are systematic reviews of the entire literature and not cherry picking studies.
You seem to be trying to infer some sort of conspiracy theory. But the vast majority of large studies done in nutrition and health are independently funded and there is no major health or medical group (government or independent) that makes the claims you are making about dairy. As I said before, its only groups that promote vegan or plant-based diets that demonize dairy in the way you are here.Jebus wrote: ↑Thu Aug 09, 2018 1:59 am Does the dairy industry ever fund political campaigns?
Can you think of any governments that have a history of subsidizing the dairy industry?
Is lactose intolerance something extremely rare? Is lactose intolerance something that has been spread by those promoting pseudo science?
Was the relevant research funded and/or carried out by an independent group such as the Harvard School of Medical Health or by a group who has a financial interest in the outcome, such as the Dairy Research Institute?
I was trying (but obviously failed) to help you understand why government agencies still promote cow milk as something healthful despite the overwhelming evidence to the contrary.
I've never heard a vegan claim that refined carbohydrates are healthful, and I've never heard a vegan compare the harm of such to saturated fat in dairy. ? Perhaps you have lots of conversations with vegans about refined carbohydrates? Do you believe that vegans consume more refined carbohydrates than non-vegans?carnap wrote: ↑Thu Aug 09, 2018 4:27 amI find on matters of health vegans tend to be rather inconsistent. For example while the high saturated fat content in dairy is a concern so are refined carbohydrates and the two seem to be pretty equally problematic health wise, yet vegans don't typically demonize refined carbohydrates but instead regularly consume them.
This is the conspiracy theory, the "dairy industry" has somehow managed to influence the world's governments, the world's universities and the world's health groups despite being a relatively small industry.
Many vegans (and non-vegans) think refined carbohydrates are fine health wise. But that wasn't my point, my point is that vegans often will run around demonizing dairy foods health-wise while eating a large portion of refined carbohydrates. There is a persistent belief among vegans that a food being vegan somehow makes it healthier than a non-vegan version and I think this belief leads to really sub-optimal dietary behavior.
I mostly agree, but its precisely this sort of research on dairy that has failed to show any significant issue with dairy. As I mentioned before, while milk consumption does seem to increase your risk of reproductive cancers it reduces risk of others like colon cancer. When you study the overall impact of a whole food you get to look at the net positive and negative impact the food has on health.
I'm not sure what you're trying to say here but the gene for lactose persistence is an adaptation seen in populations that have traditionally consumed dairy. There are associations with ethnicity but that isn't the real issue, its whether your ancestral diet included dairy or not. For example East Asians did not make widespread use of milk so they have low rates of this gene while Northern Europeans made heavy use of dairy and have very high rates of the gene.
Adding to this, I was checking out some more info (mostly from the World Health Organization), which indicates that cow's milk would be a reservoir for contaminants, health concerns, etc... this is to a greater extent or potential than so-called plant milks, because such things accumulate in the animal milk fat.cornivore wrote: ↑Wed Aug 08, 2018 2:34 am One thing that can be harmful between bovine secretions and rice milk is arsenic (especially if contaminated water gets into the milk).The EPA likewise said that bovine milk does not contain as much arsenic from cows ingesting it in particular, however this does not keep it from being more concentrated in an infant formula that is bovine based. "The most commonly used infant formulas contain purified cow's milk whey and casein as a protein source". Another study reports that some of this depends on how much arsenic a cow ingests though: "In the experiments with lactating dairy cows, significantly higher levels of arsenic in milk were observed for cows fed either 3.2 or 4.8 mg of arsenic per kilogram of body weight from arsanilic acid or 3-nitro ".This [study] suggests that both components of reconstituted formula—the powder and the water with which it is mixed—can be sources of arsenic exposure for formula-fed infants. Conversely, breast milk has been found to have relatively low concentrations of arsenic, even in women with high exposure via their drinking water.—Estimated Exposure to Arsenic in Breastfed and Formula-Fed Infants
Also, mycotoxins in plant beverages can be reduced through cooking, possibly during production, whereas they cannot be reduced at all through pasterurization or cooking with cows milk.
"Data show that there is a seasonal trend in the levels of mycotoxins in milk, with these being higher in the cold months probably due to the prolonged storage required for the cattle feeds providing favorable conditions for fungal growth.": Mycotoxins in Bovine Milk and Dairy Products: A ReviewAflatoxins decompose at temperatures of 237–306°C (Rustom, 1997); therefore, pasteurization of milk cannot protect against AFM1 contamination. Awasthi et al. (2012) reported that neither pasteurization nor boiling influenced the level of AFM1 in bovine milk. However, boiling corn grits reduced aflatoxins by 28% and frying after boiling reduced their levels by 34–53%. Aflatoxins: A Global Concern for Food Safety, Human Health and Their Management
Keep in mind that bovine milk is plant milk, because cows are fed plants, and apparently the toxins in such plant feed are present in cow milk. What makes dairy worse, as far as this goes, is that the toxins are harder to remove from milk than the plant foods, when prepared for human consumption. Rice for example can have its arsenic levels reduced by 60% if cooked in excess water and drained, whereas cows are fed things like rice bran, which is not prepared this way, so their milk may contain more arsenic from rice than rice milk would, if prepared carefully. I wouldn't presume that anything is prepared carefully though. High levels of arsenic have been found in rice milk and rice bran, so either type of milk should be avoided for that matter (rice gets more attention for arsenic content, but maybe they should have to list what the cows ate as ingredients in milk too, because it's in there—yes, it isn't just that you are what you eat, it's that you are what you ate eats—you are an ateeat)!
Dioxins and their effects on human health:Milk is one of the basic foods which is liable to be contaminated by toxic substances, such as heavy metals and pesticides.
These elements in milk are of particular concern because milk is largely consumed by infants and children.
Evaluation of Dioxin in U.S. Cow's Milk:Dioxins are highly toxic and can cause reproductive and developmental problems, damage the immune system, interfere with hormones and also cause cancer. Dioxins are found throughout the world in the environment and they accumulate in the food chain, mainly in the fatty tissue of animals. More than 90% of human exposure is through food, mainly meat and dairy products, fish and shellfish.
Learn about Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs):Milk fat is likely to be among the highest dietary sources of exposure to persistent, bioaccumulative, and toxic (PBT) contaminants, thus it is important to understand PBT levels in milk.
Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs):PCBs have been demonstrated to cause a variety of adverse health effects. They have been shown to cause cancer in animals as well as a number of serious non-cancer health effects in animals, including: effects on the immune system, reproductive system, nervous system, endocrine system and other health effects. Studies in humans support evidence for potential carcinogenic and non-carcinogenic effects of PCBs. The different health effects of PCBs may be interrelated. Alterations in one system may have significant implications for the other systems of the body. The potential health effects of PCB exposure are discussed in greater detail below...
Diet, nutrition and chronic diseases in context:PCBs accumulate in human adipose tissue and breast milk.
The levels of PCBs found in different foodstuff are:
•animal fat: 20 to 240 µg/kg
•cow's milk: 5 to 200 µg/kg
•butter: 30 to 80 µg/kg
•fish: 10 to 500 µg/kg, on a fat basis. Certain fish species (eel) and fish products (fish liver and fish oils) may contain much higher levels, up to 10 mg PCBs/kg
•vegetables, cereals, fruits, and a number of other products: <10 µg/kg
•Main causes of concern regarding PCBs are: large fish, shellfish, marine mammals, meat, milk, and other dairy products.
Report on Carbon Footprint Due to Milk Formula:Consumption of formula instead of breast milk in infancy has also been shown to increase diastolic and mean arterial blood pressure in later life... current evidence indicates adverse effects of formula milk on cardiovascular disease risk factors; this is consistent with the observations of increased mortality among older adults who were fed formula as infants.
Guidelines on food fortification with micronutrients:If all the immense resource costs of formula feeding were properly accounted for, the baby food industry would be closed down, and mothers paid to breastfeed.
Chernobyl: the true scale of the accident:As the vitamin C content of cow’s milk is low, infants represent a further subgroup that is potentially highrisk for vitamin C deficiency. There have been a number of reports – across several world regions – of scurvy in infants fed on evaporated cow’s milk.
Maximum Residue Limits for Pesticides and Veterinary Drugs:Residents who ate food contaminated with radioactive iodine in the days immediately after the accident received relatively high doses to the thyroid gland. This was especially true of children who drank milk from cows who had eaten contaminated grass. Since iodine concentrates in the thyroid gland, this was a major cause of the high incidence of thyroid cancer in children.
Toxicological evaluation of certain veterinary drug residues in food:Residues in processed dairy commodities with higher fat content than milk will have a higher residue level in the processed commodity than in the raw product for fat-soluble substances.
High levels of circulating insulin-like growth factor-I increase prostate cancer risk:Several studies have indicated that IGF I concentrations in human serum could be associated with nutritional status and milk intake. Milk consumption is particularly shown to be associated with an increase in concentrations of IGF I in plasma in both the young and adults.
In an intervention study, when men aged 55 85 years were instructed to drink three servings of nonfat or 1% milk per day as part of their normal diet, IGF I concentrations in serum increased significantly (10%) in the intervention group by the end of the 12 week intervention period compared with concentrations in those who maintained their normal diet.
Relationship between Insulin-like Growth Factor-1 in diabetic mother’s breast milk and the blood serum of their babies:Our data add further support for IGF-I as an etiologic factor in prostate cancer and indicate that circulating IGF-I levels measured at a comparatively young age may be most strongly associated with prostate cancer risk.
Environmental rather than genetic fetal overgrowth:There is evidence that the increased action of IGF-1 is likely in the offspring of diabetic mothers and represents part of the mechanism of fetal overgrowth.
Milk consumption during pregnancy increases birth weight, a risk factor for the development of diseases of civilization:Metabolic (environmentally induced) macrosomia is distinguished from genetic or constitutional macrosomia and is defined as the growth of a fetus beyond its genetic potential. It is characterized by excessive fat accumulation during fetal life.
Milk intake and risk of mortality and fractures in women and men:Current dietary recommendations for pregnant women intend to assure sufficient supply of calcium and high quality proteins for the growing fetus. However, there is more and more concern about milk’s role as a source of calcium. According to the recent opinion of Harvard School of Public Health milk isn’t the only, or even best, source of calcium. There are non-dairy foods including leafy green vegetables, broccoli, beans and tofu that supply high amounts of calcium. These calcium-rich food alternatives have a significant advantage in comparison to milk: they do not overstimulate mTORC1 signaling and most importantly do not transfer biologically active exosomal microRNAs.
We appeal to the medical community to define save upper limits for milk consumption during pregnancy, especially for those women who enter gravity with increased BMI.
Apparently the overconsumption of dairy milk is of particular concern at all ages (even prior to birth), and could be dangerous to promote drinking exclusively for nutritional benefits, while ignoring the potential for associated health problems. Especially when milkfat is consumed in addition to other animal fats.A higher consumption of milk in women and men is not accompanied by a lower risk of fracture and instead may be associated with a higher rate of death.
Provide evidence that cows milk has any nutritional advantage over fortified milks like Soy or Protein Nutmilk. There aren't any "magical nutrients" that can't either can't be added to vegan substitutes, or taken in the form of a multivitamin. Again, your skepticism is baseless.carnap wrote: ↑Wed Aug 08, 2018 4:25 am And there is evidence that dairy has nutritional advantages, dairy is overall more nutritious than most plant-based "milks" and the nutrients have high bio-availability. With US guidelines fortified soy milk is the only alternative that is officially recommended as a substitute.
Cornivore wrote:I think that talking about the FDA responding to this as a nurtirional crisis is nonsense, because health supplements and vitamins are not regulated as far as actually containing any of the nutrients they claim to, and the FDA isn't doing anything about making sure those are particularly healthy for people who believe what the labels say. Obviously if anything can be called a "health food" or "healthy", etc., even if it isn't, then it's a stretch to think that milk is even more synonymous with health than the word healthy, or that they consider milk to be the one and only health food in existence. Especially when it had to be fortified with added nutrients to be considered among those foods, and it isn't the only fortified food. The CDC recommends fortified milk alternatives for children too. The game of semantics is probably based on politics and lobbying (like the food pyramid was), because the dairy industry might make more money and abuse that many more cows if nobody else could use the word.
Except this doesn't refute anything I said. Your response here is strange, you seem to be confusing the word "most" with "all". I said most plant-based milks are low in protein, posting about a single instance of a plant-milk doesn't address what I've said.
There are nutrients that cannot be readily added to vegan substitutes but its also not just about the nutrients themselves but also co-factors that are contained in milk. Nutrients in milk have high bio-availability, that is in part due to the specific form of the nutrients but also because milk contains compounds that increase absorption. This co-factors not only increase absorption of nutrients in milk but also other foods eaten at the same time. Also research on calcium supplementation, which would include heavy fortification, is looking increasingly grim. For example calcium supplementation has been linked to increased rates of heart disease.
Not sure what "we" you're referring to but people are replacing milk with mock milk beverages like almond milk. That includes many vegans as well as non-vegans. Some people (mostly vegans) are also replacing other dairy products like cheese with mock versions as well.