Raw milk sickens 21 people in Florida including 6 children
[August 06, 2025]
By KATE PAYNE
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — Six children are among 21 people who have E.
coli or campylobacter infections after consuming raw milk from a farm in
Florida, public health officials said.
Seven people have been hospitalized, and at least two of them are
suffering severe complications, the Florida Department of Health said
Monday. It did not specify if any of the six infected children under 10
are among those being treated in hospitals, nor how many people were
infected by E. coli, campylobacter or both bacteria.
“Sanitation practices in this farm are of particular concern due to the
number of cases,” reads the state advisory, which did not identify the
farm linked to the cluster of infections in northeast and central
Florida.
Raw milk appears to be gaining in popularity, despite years of warnings
about the health risks of drinking unpasteurized products. The Food and
Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
say raw milk is one of the “riskiest” foods people can consume.
Raw milk is far more likely than pasteurized milk to cause illnesses and
hospitalizations because of dangerous bacteria such as campylobacter,
listeria, salmonella and E. coli, research shows. The infections can
cause gastrointestinal illness, and in some cases may lead to serious
complications, including a life-threatening form of kidney failure.
Young children, the elderly, immunocompromised people and pregnant women
are at greater risk of complications.
“We invented pasteurization for a reason,” said Keith Schneider, a food
safety professor at the University of Florida. “It's maddening that this
is happening.”
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A dairy cow is milked at a farm in Newcastle, Maine, Tuesday, March
31, 2015. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File)
 States have widely varying
regulations regarding raw milk, with some allowing retail purchases
in stores and others allowing sale only at farms. Some states allow
“cowshares,” in which customers buy milk produced by designated
animals, and some allow consumption only by farm owners, employees
or “non-paying guests.”
In Florida, the sale and distribution of raw milk for human
consumption is illegal, but retailers get around the ban by labeling
their products as for pet or animal food only. Schneider called it a
“wink, wink, nudge, nudge,” form of regulation.
“Everybody knows that they're selling it for human consumption,”
Schneider said, adding that people getting sick — or even seriously
ill — from drinking raw milk is “not a question of if, but when.”
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