Michael Hanson/Sr Scientiest/Consumers Union & IATP/Health Care Without Harm
on rBGH/rBST

September 04, 2007

*Subject:* Newspaper article by Michael Hanson, Senior Scientiest at
Consumers Union, & David Wallinga, of IATP & Health Care Without Harm

This recent newspaper article published in Ashville, North Carolina, is an
excellent summation of the history and current situation pertaining to
Monsanto's rbST/rbGH. It is not easily dismissed, since it is from Consumers
Union and the Institute for Ag and Trade Policy scientists. It reflects the
mounting evidence of citizen rejection of milk from cows injected with the
drug

http://citizen- times.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070827/OPINION07/7
0822030/1270/OPINION

*Let's keep Monsanto out of our milk*

by Michael Hansen and David Wallinga

published August 27, 2007 12:15 am

Ashville Citizen-Times

The recent announcement by Kroger stores to prohibit the genetically
engineered growth hormone rbST (also known as rbGH) from its private
label milk brand is part of a nationwide trend among dairy processors,
retailers and farmers. Starbucks, Tillamook, Safeway and Chipotle
Restaurants have already begun to discontinue the hormone and California
Dairies, Inc., which produces nearly 10 percent of the nation's milk,
announced it went rbST-free August 1.

Each of these companies affirms that the chief impetus for its actions
comes from rising consumer demand for hormone-free dairy products. Those
consumers cite legitimate health concerns, including increased cancer
risks and antibiotic resistance.

Facing dwindling sales of rbGH, Monsanto, its sole manufacturer, is
trying to thwart informed consumer choice by pressuring the Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) and Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to restrict
labeling of such products as rbGH-free. Monsanto claims there are no
differences in the milk and that consumers are somehow "misled" by these
labels.

Of course, consumers know exactly what "rbGH-free" means, just as they
recognize the meaning of "No preservatives," "No artificial colors" and
"No artificial flavors." These labels are important tools consumers use
to make educated choices about products they buy, including additional
labeling about how animals are treated in meat, egg and dairy
production.

Regardless of the claims of Monsanto and its supporters, there are
significant differences in rbGH-treated cows and their milk. Treated
cows experience higher rates of 16 harmful medical conditions, including
pregnancy problems, diarrhea and mastitis, which Monsanto's own package
insert acknowledges. Virtually every animal protection agency in the
country, including the Humane Society of the United States and Humane
Farming Association, criticizes use of this synthetic hormone.

Elevated mastitis rates lead to increased treatment with antibiotics.
Bacteria resistant to these antibiotics may pass into humans through
milk, air, water or soil, or through ground meat, increasing antibiotic
resistance. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
overuse of agricultural antibiotics is a significant contributor to
food-borne, antibiotic-resistant infections in humans, a multi-billion
dollar problem in the United States

There is also no doubt that rbGH use in cows increases the level in
cows' milk of another growth hormone found in both cows and humans,
IGF-1. While a certain level of IGF-1 is needed for normal development
and daily functioning, elevated levels are strongly implicated with
increased risk of breast, prostate, colon and other cancers. Advocates
of rbGH claim that the amount of IGF-1 taken in from dairy products is
not hazardous, but numerous scientists believe that even small amounts
of additional hormone exposure can be significant. It's simply common
sense to avoid a higher risk of getting cancer when the source of that
risk is completely unnecessary.

Government leaders, scientists and farmers alike criticized the FDA's
controversial decision to approve rbGH in 1993. In contrast, most
industrialized nations of the world, including Canada, Australia, New
Zealand, Japan and all 25 members of the European Union, have disallowed
its use.

The Codex Alimentarius, the United Nations' main food safety body, twice
decided that it could not endorse the safety of rbGH for human health.

Hospitals across the country are also taking action. Health Care Without
Harm, an international coalition of over 440 healthcare and public
health organizations dedicated to improving health and safety in
hospitals, formally declared its opposition to rbGH in 2005. Since then,
leading hospitals and hospital systems, such as Catholic Healthcare
West, the largest Catholic healthcare system in the country, have begun
purchasing rbGH-free dairy products.

Monsanto's attempt to pressure the FDA and FTC to restrict rbGH-free
labeling is a self-serving attempt to save their falling profits. We
need our government to reject this assault on the right of businesses to
inform consumers and the right of all citizens to make informed choices
about what they eat.

________________________________

Michael Hansen, PhD, is a senior scientist, Consumers Union (publisher
of Consumer Reports) - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
David Wallinga, MD, is food and health director, Institute for
Agriculture and Trade Policy and Health Care Without Harm -
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Distributed by MinutemanMedia.org.


-- 
As our circle of knowledge expands, so does the circumference of darkness
surrounding it.
Albert Einstein
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