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Study: Organic Dairy and Meat Improves Quality of Mothers' Breast Milk
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07-30-2007, 02:24 AM
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Study: Organic Dairy and Meat Improves Quality of Mothers' Breast Milk
Organic Dairy and Meat Improves Quality of Mothers' Breast Milk
Study: Organic Dairy and Meat Improves Quality of Mothers' Breast Milk Press Release The Cornucopia Institute, July 24, 2007 Straight to the Source Contact: The Cornucopia Institute Charlotte Vallaeys, 617-818-6981 CORNUCOPIA, WI: A new study, published in the British Journal of Nutrition, showed that organic dairy and meat products in a mother's diet positively affect the nutritional quality of her breast milk-markedly increasing beneficial fatty acids. Specifically, a diet in which 90% or more of dairy and meat products are organic is correlated with measurably higher levels of conjugated linoleic acid (CLA). CLA is a type of fat that is believed to have anti-carcinogenic, anti-atherosclerotic, anti-diabetic and immune-enhancing effects, as well as a favorable influence on body fat composition. For newborns specifically, CLA is believed to especially aid immune system development. "These findings provide scientific support for common sense, by showing that organic foods are healthier," says Dr. Lukas Rist, who is the lead author of the study and the head of research at the Paracelsus Hospital in Switzerland. The study involved 312 breastfeeding women with 1-month old infants from the Netherlands. "The study shows that breastfeeding mothers can influence the supply and quality of fatty acids for their infants, by eating a diet with organic dairy," adds Rist. Other recent studies add support to the growing body of evidence that organic foods offer measurable nutritional benefits. Cows that acquire most of their nutrition from grazing pasture have been shown to produce milk with decreased levels of saturated fat-the "bad" type of fat-and increased concentrations of unsaturated fatty acids and CLA-the "good" types of fat. In the European Union, where the study took place, organic standards require that dairy farms make maximum use of pasture. U.S. organic regulations also require that organic dairy cattle not be confined with pasture being a major feed source. Research has proven that meat and milk from pastured animals contain elevated levels of antioxidants and other nutritionally beneficial compounds, including CLA. "Many consumers know, based on increasing media coverage of scientific and medical research, that organic foods reduce their exposure to pesticides, hormones, and antibiotics, but this study shows that organic foods also offer superior nutritional quality," says Charlotte Vallaeys, Farm and Food Policy Analyst at The Cornucopia Institute. "The benefits of consuming organic food are of paramount importance when thinking about their impact on the development of very young children and fetuses," Vallaeys added. The relationship between a mother's organic diet and the quality of her breast milk is an important topic that has caught scientists' attention. Additional studies that look at the health status of newborns fed by breastfeeding mothers with an organic diet are under way and will be published in the near future. "There is a synergy and logic to the approach that organic farmers take in their production model," said Dave Minar of Cedar Summit Dairy, an organic farmstead producer in New Prague, Minnesota. "Concentrating on the health and fertility of soil results in pastures and feed of superior nutritional quality-and that results in incredibly vibrant, long living, and healthy livestock. It should be of no surprise that there is an increasing body of scientific evidence now substantiating the benefits of an organic diet, especially for infants and children." http://www.organicconsumers.org/articles...e_6245.cfm EDITOR'S NOTE: A copy of the full report is available on The Cornucopia Institute website at: http://www.cornucopia.org/Rist_2007_study.pdf |
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07-30-2007, 11:16 AM
(This post was last modified: 07-30-2007 11:19 AM by ephilution.)
Post: #2
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Study: Organic Dairy and Meat Improves Quality of Mothers' Breast Milk
Interesting material, which makes me rethink the Milk is Poison slogan. Maybe it would be better to say that indeed industrial milk is poison whereas organic milk rather is a blessing. :smile:
General Brainquirks:http://1phil4everyill.wordpress.com Mind control imbued by movies:http://predictiveprogramminginmovies.blogspot.com Movers and Shakers of the SMOM:http://moversandshakersofthesmom.blogspot...identity.html |
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07-30-2007, 05:53 PM
Post: #3
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Study: Organic Dairy and Meat Improves Quality of Mothers' Breast Milk
Yes. I have a little advantage on some of this growing up on a farm and then having one now, even though we don't farm fulltime like people did back then.
When I was young my great grandmother would make her own butter and we drank milk straight from the jar that came straight from that day's milking, after she skimmed off the cream. They milked by hand and we emptied the buckets into a funnel with a straining pad into large milk cans then when full we put the cans in a large metal box that had cooled water circulating through it. Before then they kept it cool in a creek or river I'm told. In the early 70s they were paid to quit or be priced out. Years later my uncle went back into it only this time it was automated, unlike Annie & Papas. There were so mnay chemicals involved expecially in cleaning the large tank, lines, etc and these were very dangerous ones. It didn't last long after my uncles' death until his son was given a choice to either be paid not to milk or be priced out, he took the buy out. Now it's funny but he wasn't allowed to take any milk or cream from it and chemicals were sometimes added for less bacteria rates, plus the residue from cleaning was still left. Growing up we drank raw milk and never got sick from it. Milk today I get a bad feeling after drinking so we switched to Organic Milk but even then, it's like Enriched Flour, most of the good is gone. Pasterization was started because of no way to seperate the first nasty corporate milk from good grass grazed milk. The corporate milk was heavily contaminated. You'll also find eggs are the same way. The funny thing is the way that corporate gets in some disinfo in other areas like the same people that were correct on that were incorrect on cholestral. |
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