Bird flu outbreak in dairy cows fails to deter US raw milk sellers
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[May 03, 2024]
By Lisa Baertlein, Julie Steenhuysen and Tom Polansek
LOS ANGELES/CHICAGO (Reuters) - U.S. sellers of raw milk appear
undeterred by federal health warnings for consumers to avoid drinking
unpasteurized milk in light of a bird flu outbreak that has affected
dairy herds in nine states and sickened at least one dairy farm worker.
Thirty of the 50 U.S. states permit the sale of raw milk, which accounts
for less than 1% percent of U.S. milk sales. A nationwide survey of
pasteurized milk - heated to kill pathogens - found avian flu virus
particles in about 20% of samples tested.
Many raw milk drinkers share a deep skepticism of public health
officials, including the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which
also battled political polarization and misinformation during and after
the COVID pandemic.
"Our consumers don't like the FDA. If the FDA says to do something, they
will do the opposite," said Mark McAfee, owner of Raw Farm in Fresno,
California, the largest U.S. raw milk dairy.
Federal health officials have repeated warnings for consumers to avoid
raw milk, which can carry a host of illness-causing pathogens, due to
the outbreak. But changing the minds of raw milk fans, who range from
mothers seeking to feed their families unprocessed food to body builders
on protein-heavy diets, will be an uphill climb.
Preliminary results of tests of pasteurized milk show that the process
kills the virus, leaving only remnants behind. But the presence of H5N1
in milk has led many experts to warn against consuming raw milk products
as they investigate whether bird flu can be transmitted by eating
unpasteurized milk or cheese. And there is evidence that the virus
killed a large number of cats that consumed raw milk on farms where the
virus was found.
Dr. Gigi Gronvall, an immunologist atthe Johns Hopkins Center for
Health Security in Baltimore, said drinking raw milk is already a
"crapshoot" because of the risk of diseases such as brucellosis, a
bacterial infection that can be caused by drinking raw milk.
"It's even riskier now. It's just not a good practice for so many
reasons," Gronvall said.
Enthusiasts have said raw milk has a creamier taste and nutritional
benefits that are wiped out by pasteurization. U.S. health officials
have said there is no scientific basis for the health claims.
"Our sales have never been higher," said McAfee, without providing
figures.
His dairy has kept cows safe with precautions including not moving cows
on or off his farm and separating any sick cows from the herd, McAfee
said.
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Bottles of raw milk are seen in a display in a Sprouts Farmers
Market store in Los Angeles, California, U.S. April 29, 2024.
REUTERS/Lisa Baertlein/File Photo
Nevertheless, products from Raw Farm
and its predecessor company, Organic Pastures Dairy, have been tied
to outbreaks of foodborne illness. Last year, the dairy recalled raw
milk after it was linked to a Salmonella outbreak that caused
illness in at least 19 people in California.
California has not reported avian flu in dairy cows.
Some former fans have stopped drinking raw milk, including
Connecticut farmer Jerry Grabarek, who in 2022 abandoned his nearly
50-year habit of adding raw milk from his own cows to coffee.
"You're playing Russian roulette with a lot of things when you drink
raw milk," Grabarek said.
'SMOKE AND MIRRORS'
Maryland-based raw cheese producer Sally Fallon Morell said she
doubts the accuracy of the federal government's findings and
believes the latest raw milk warnings are driven by worries that the
product is eroding pasteurized milk sales.
"It's all smoke and mirrors," said Fallon Morell, president of the
Weston A. Price Foundation, which advocates for raw milk.
Phoenix-based Sprouts Farmers Market has more than 400 grocery
stores and is the largest publicly held U.S. seller of raw milk.
Andronico's, which operates seven stores and is part of the
Albertsons Companies, carries a limited assortment of raw milk local
suppliers.
"We are coordinating with our suppliers and monitoring all
regulatory updates," Andronico's spokeswoman Sarah Holland said.
Sprouts did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
This summer, Raw Farm will start national sales of frozen raw milk
labeled for pets, McAfee said. The company's fans are already
sharing social media posts about how they buy pet products to get
around laws that limit raw milk sales for human consumption.
A Texas farm worker developed conjunctivitis following exposure to
dairy cows - the second case of the H5N1 strain of bird flu
identified in a person in the United States, following a 2022 case
in Colorado.
(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles and Tom Polansek, Julie
Steenhuysen and PJ Huffstutter in Chicago; Editing by Will Dunham)
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