L.M. asks from Lufkin, TX on October 11, 2011
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B.M. answers from Dallas on October 13, 2011
I just read an interesting article in Mother Earth News about this very issue:
http://www.motherearthnews.com/real-food/raw-milk-zmrz11z...
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D.K. answers from Pittsburgh on October 11, 2011
Please look at the CDC website. We have pasteurized milk today because a HUGE number of minor and serious illnesses (and deaths) used to be due to raw milk. The only reason the numbers are lower today is because most of us drink pasteurized milk. All pasteurization is is heating the milk to a temperature that kills most food borne pathogens - it cannot possibly harm you or your son. But raw milk absolutely can.
My husband worked on a dairy farm in college. He did not realize milk from the bulk tank was not pasteurized. He was sick for over a month and lost 20 lbs.
7 moms found this helpful
L.O. answers from Detroit on October 11, 2011
Please do not feed your baby raw milk from any animal. We learned to pasteurize milk because of pathogens in raw milk. It is not safe to drink raw milk .. not safe for adults.. especially not for infants and young children.
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E.J. answers from Lincoln on October 11, 2011
I took a science of food class a few semesters back and it was enough to make me not want to eat. PLEASE don't give your baby anything that's not pasteurized!!! I'll never forget the slide that our professor showed us of this cute little boy who died at age 3 or so from drinking unpasteurized apple juice.
I looked this up on the FDA website just to support my thoughts.
"....raw milk can harbor dangerous microorganisms that can pose serious health risks to you and your family. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 800 people in the United States have gotten sick from drinking raw milk or eating cheese made from raw milk since 1998."
"....bacteria in raw milk can be especially dangerous to pregnant women, children, the elderly, and people with weakened immune systems."
please follow up on this... http://www.fda.gov/Food/ResourcesForYou/consumers/ucm0795...
Good luck!!
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K.U. answers from Detroit on October 11, 2011
I would stick with pasteurized milk - I wouldn't do any kind of raw, because of the potential pathogens and your child's immune system is still very immature. Have you talked to your pediatrician about this?
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B.C. answers from Los Angeles on October 11, 2011
If you are paranoid about germs, then stay with the pasturized milk. We used raw cow's milk for about two years and never once got sick from it.
We had a friend that had a milk cow and we would buy raw milk from him. If the farmer practices good sanitation methods, then raw milk is no problem. The man we got milk from had just one cow and its milk had a fat (cream) content of about 25% to 28%. We made our own butter and it made wonderful ice cream. WOW was the ice cream ever good!!!
If I had little kids at home, and I needed milk on a regular basis, I'd go with the raw cow's milk.
My mom was allergic to cows milk. My grandma used to get goats milk for my mom (early 1920's). It was never pasturized and she thrived on it.
Good luck to you and yours.
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A.P. answers from Janesville-Beloit on October 11, 2011
Our pediatrician made a point to tell us at our 1-year appt that the milk needed to be pasturized to be safe for infants/toddlers.
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M.M. answers from Chicago on October 11, 2011
My child is milk free and he is happy, healthy, not hyper, and very intelligent.
My opinion about milk - it is not for us, it is for baby cows and baby goats. We are genetically programmed to get our nutrition from other sources.
If you want to chose, though, I would advise against anything "raw". With all the outbreaks out there why would you want to chance it, right?
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L.R. answers from Washington DC on October 12, 2011
Young children are far, far more susceptible to grave illnesses or death from e.coli and other nasties found in any unpasteurized foods or milks. They are likelier to have much more serious illness from these things than a healthy adult would have -- even if the child is healthy. Their systems are not able to handle things like e.coli, which can shut down their kidneys.
Always go with pasteurized products for your children. Any pediatrician would tell you so.
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