Social media promotion of raw milk 'misleading and dangerous'

Public health experts are sounding the alarm about online content creators sharing misinformation about raw milk and spruiking it as a health food.

It is illegal to sell raw or unpasteurised milk for human consumption in Australia because it may contain harmful pathogens.


Pasteurisation is a specific heat treatment process used to kill bacteria such as E.coli, salmonella and listeria.

In the US state of Florida, 21 people became sick from campylobacter and E.coli and seven were hospitalised in August, after consuming raw milk from the same dairy.


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It is illegal to sell raw milk for human consumption in Australia. (ABC Midwest & Wheatbelt: Anna Cox)


The state's health department issued a statement warning people about concerning sanitation practices at the farm, and of the potentially severe illness that could occur as a result of consuming unpasteurised milk.

In 2014, a coroner found raw milk the "likely" cause of the death of a three-year-old boy in Victoria, although that finding has been contested by raw milk advocates.

In that case, the child had consumed raw milk sold as "bath milk".

Bath milk is labelled "not for human consumption" and is stocked in health food stores and independent grocers across Australia.


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Adam Strupek is a Brisbane-based holistic health and wellness advocate. (Supplied)


Adam Strupek runs wellness retreats in Brisbane, and purchases bath milk for consumption.

"It is illegal to sell raw milk for human consumption, but it's not illegal to drink the bath milk itself," Mr Strupek said.

He was fed raw dairy as a child and rediscovered it on social media as an adult.


Misinformation spread online

Mr Strupek said while pasteurisation could kill harmful bacteria, he believed it could also reduce other nutrients.

However, Deakin University lecturer Emily Denniss, who specialises in public health nutrition, disagreed.

Mr Strupek also claimed lactase, a digestive enzyme that assists with the digestion of milk, was destroyed by pasteurisation.

Dr Denniss said there was no lactase present in raw or pasteurised milk.


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Emily Denniss is a nutritionist who specialises in health and nutrition communication. (Supplied)


Dr Denniss is also concerned about the broader public health implications of diet trends and misinformation being shared on social media.

She said while it was impossible to quantify the number of people drinking raw milk, the promotion via social media was a growing trend.

"It's part of a bigger, more worrying trend of wellness influencers and other voices on social media thinking they have the credibility and authority to be undermining years of scientific research," she said.

"Misinformation and conspiracy theories can really undermine the public's trust in credible voices."


Food standards important

CSIRO food microbiologist Cathy McAuley said she was dismayed by the raw milk trend.

She said it was possible for diseases to be passed on through the cow, but also the environment in which the milk was obtained, making pasteurisation essential.

"There is bacteria in soil, water and faeces. If this gets on to the cow, it can get into the milk," she said.

Stuart Johnson, a WA-based board member of the Dairy Industry Association of Australia, said he had spoken to a number of dairy producers looking into selling bath milk.


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Stuart Johnson believes farmers can make profits in less dangerous ways. (Supplied: Stuart Johnson)


He said the interest came from farmers who wanted to safeguard their income due to a tight dairy industry.

"They think they could sell it for a premium price, and I always say to them, 'Do you want to be the one to meet the mother of the child who fell sick, or worse?'" Mr Johnson said.

WA Farmers Federation president Steve McGuire said WA dairy farmers "produce milk to the highest quality and hygiene standards".

"However, in line with Australian food safety standards, milk is pasteurised so that Australians can purchase it with confidence, knowing it is safe to drink."

Written by Anna Cox, ABC News.
 

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I sometimes wonder how I survived my childhood in the 40s and 50s. I grew up in a small town on the mid north coast of NSW and we owned a cow in partnership with one of our neighbours. Dad milked her every morning, and our neighbour milked her every night. Apparently, our two families were dicing with death drinking milk straight from the cow.

Oh well, I'll add that deadly pursuit to my coffee consumption causing bladder cancer and my apparent death wish from eating more than two eggs a week. Cholesterol apparently. 😂
 
I sometimes wonder how I survived my childhood in the 40s and 50s. I grew up in a small town on the mid north coast of NSW and we owned a cow in partnership with one of our neighbours. Dad milked her every morning, and our neighbour milked her every night. Apparently, our two families were dicing with death drinking milk straight from the cow.

Oh well, I'll add that deadly pursuit to my coffee consumption causing bladder cancer and my apparent death wish from eating more than two eggs a week. Cholesterol apparently. 😂
Same here. Fresh milk straight from the cow and noone in the family died or got I'll from it...🤔
 
Good grief, is this another alarmist control tactic. Myself, my parents, grandparents, their siblings, great grandparents and who knows how many others, including my own kids, all grew up and thrived on milk straight from the cow. I myself hand milked 4 house cows twice a day to have milk for our family of seven. Definitely no side affects or health issues in any of us.
 
Back when you had bottled fresh un pasteurised milk delivered daily, I along with half the regional city I was l living in became very s8ck with salmonella poisoning. At the time I was 6 mths pregnant with my second baby. After ptesenting at the hospital the waiting room was full with people vomiting into bowls. It took 3 werks for my symtoms to subside. I"m still surprised that with the persistent stomach cramps I didn't go into premature labour. The salmonella was traced back to a dairy hand at the local dairy. It was closed down shortly after. I grew up on a farm with our own milk, no problems with illness from our handful of dairy cows we milked. Put a large herd together where the milk from all cows are mixed in huge vats, the warm milk becomes the perfect "petrie dish" for infectious bacterias to multiply and contaminate the whole vat where initial contamination may have come from just one cow. Hence we have pasteurisation of dairy products.
 
Good grief, is this another alarmist control tactic. Myself, my parents, grandparents, their siblings, great grandparents and who knows how many others, including my own kids, all grew up and thrived on milk straight from the cow. I myself hand milked 4 house cows twice a day to have milk for our family of seven. Definitely no side affects or health issues in any of us.
It is not alarmist at all. I grew up with fresh farm milk too. The way milk in large dairies is stored, you only have to have one cow whose milk is contaminated, the whole vat of milk awaiting distribution becomes contaminated. Warm milk stored in large volumes is the perfect petrie dish.
 
Love all the people saying the article is wrong as they had access from unpasteurised milk straight from the cow. But that milk was at worst hours-old. How many bacterial reproduction cycles is that - none to hardly any.

The article is criticising the taking of days-old unpasteurised milk - not milk straight from the cow or vat. And history is full of accounts of death & injury from such a practice which is totally preventable. As they say, those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it. Hopefully it'll just be the D's & V's for their learning "experience".

I'm health-literate, so it's easy to tell the shonks who equate personal opinion as equal in weight to scientific evidence & are more than happy to tell outright lies in their pseudo-scientific spiels. Pasteurisation kills living cells, not nutrients. And lactase is made by gut linings where lactose is required to be broken down, not in milk itself. SMH.
 
Same here. Fresh milk straight from the cow and noone in the family died or got I'll from it...🤔
Survived growing up on a dairy farm. What amazes me is in those days milk only lasted 3 days before starting to turn. Nowadays I can buy milk from outlets that have a 3 week use by date.. What the hell are doing to it to make it last that long ???????
 
Have another bong, Adam Strupek.

Here's some gold top mushies to complete your stoner delusions.

Strupek is next to Stupid.
 
Survived growing up on a dairy farm. What amazes me is in those days milk only lasted 3 days before starting to turn. Nowadays I can buy milk from outlets that have a 3 week use by date.. What the hell are doing to it to make it last that long ???????
Pasteurising it!!!
 
We also lived in the South west where there are many farms with cows. Most of their milk was picked up in cans and transported but we living nearby could go with our billycan and get it filled every afternoon straight from the cows. None of us were affected as it was fresh. i then moved to another town and there was no fresh milk unless you knew someone with a cow. we got to know a lady in the town who was a farmers daughter in her young day and she had a cow in a paddock near the town and would sell milk to others plus she did sell cream and it was delicious. Otherwise the only to get milk was with Sunshine dried milk powder
 
Have another bong, Adam Strupek.

Here's some gold top mushies to complete your stoner delusions.

Strupek is next to Stupid.
Hey dude! Peace ☮️ man
 
I sometimes wonder how I survived my childhood in the 40s and 50s. I grew up in a small town on the mid north coast of NSW and we owned a cow in partnership with one of our neighbours. Dad milked her every morning, and our neighbour milked her every night. Apparently, our two families were dicing with death drinking milk straight from the cow.

Oh well, I'll add that deadly pursuit to my coffee consumption causing bladder cancer and my apparent death wish from eating more than two eggs a week. Cholesterol apparently. 😂
I agree, we also drank milk straight from the cow my grandparents had. They also had chickens we ate lots of eggs and they grew all their own vegetables and I am still alive as are my siblings and cousins.:ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO:
 
Survived growing up on a dairy farm. What amazes me is in those days milk only lasted 3 days before starting to turn. Nowadays I can buy milk from outlets that have a 3 week use by date.. What the hell are doing to it to make it last that long ???????
Good question "what are they doing to milk for it to last 3 weeks +" as from leaving the farm to arriving on a shop shelf must be 2 - 3 days at least. Sorry but health department do not have good credentials after ALL the lies they told during the pandemic (all proven since we have not had censorship). Goodness knows how many lies they are still telling us. I have also had milk from the farm vat in the 70s and never made e sick.
 
All I know is my late grandmother grew up on a dairy farm in NSW in the1920's. Back then dairy cows transmitted TB to humans. One of her sisters died, while other siblings contracted it but didn't die. Because TB lies dormant in our bodies and when they became elderly the symptoms rose again. The NSW authorities came to their homes to make sure they swallowed the medication. It was due to this transmission from cows in Australia that pasteurization was implemented. The sister who died from TB has one daughter who I speak to. She remembers vividly.
 
Farmers who used their own milk boiled it first especially as they were living in what would be classed isolated. They were basically self-sufficient and used their bartering system.
 
Same here. Fresh milk straight from the cow and noone in the family died or got I'll from it...🤔
Likewise it was still warm straight from the cow. I’m still standing and going strong 💪.
 
Likewise it was still warm straight from the cow. I’m still standing and going strong 💪.
Yep! My grandmother's sister who had TB and lived to 91.
 
I sometimes wonder how I survived my childhood in the 40s and 50s. I grew up in a small town on the mid north coast of NSW and we owned a cow in partnership with one of our neighbours. Dad milked her every morning, and our neighbour milked her every night. Apparently, our two families were dicing with death drinking milk straight from the cow.

Oh well, I'll add that deadly pursuit to my coffee consumption causing bladder cancer and my apparent death wish from eating more than two eggs a week. Cholesterol apparently. 😂
Yes. Our family had milk from out grandparents farm cows. We are all ok in our 65 to 75 years old group
 
Yep! My grandmother's sister who had TB and lived to 91.
We also lived in the South west where there are many farms with cows. Most of their milk was picked up in cans and transported but we living nearby could go with our billycan and get it filled every afternoon straight from the cows. None of us were affected as it was fresh. i then moved to another town and there was no fresh milk unless you knew someone with a cow. we got to know a lady in the town who was a farmers daughter in her young day and she had a cow in a paddock near the town and would sell milk to others plus she did sell cream and it was delicious. Otherwise the only to get milk was with Sunshine dried milk powder
I remember the Sunshine milk powder ,as kids we would add sugar and eat it by the spoonful.
 
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