Amid the worrisome and growing problem of bacterial contamination of food, there is some good news.
Dairy products are some of the safest foods for consumers to eat.
The chart to the right from a report by the Center for Science in the Public Interest shows just how low the risk of foodborne illness in milk products is compared with other foods such as seafood and poultry.
Even produce carries a significantly higher risk for foodborne illness than dairy and this includes dairy that is completely unprocessed and consumed fresh from the farm.
According to published reports from the Centers for Disease Control between 1999 to 2010, foodborne illness from raw milk averaged about 42 per year.
This means that a person is about 35,000 times more likely to get sick from other foods than from raw milk, according to Sally Fallon Morell, President of the Weston A. Price Foundation.
Mrs. Fallon Morell goes on to add that ” … with good management practices in small grass-based dairies offering fresh unprocessed whole milk for direct human consumption, we may be able to reduce the risk even further.”
While cleanliness and good farm management practices have traditionally been the best ways to minimize the already low risk for raw milk contamination, technology is now offering another tool in the arsenal.
The Mocon Greenlight 900 Series
A recently developed technology now offers grass-based dairies the ability to test the safety of every batch of raw milk within hours in a cost-effective and efficient manner.
Developed by Mocon Inc. of Minneapolis, Minnesota in partnership with Luxel Biosciences of Cork, Ireland, the small, compact GreenLightâ„¢ Model 910 is a breakthrough system which offers rapid, same day, preventative screening technology for aerobic bacteria right on the farm by measuring respiration to determine the total live bacteria colony count.
Traditional screening technology for pathogenic bacteria that respirate aerobically such as E. Coli, Listeria, Salmonella, and Campylobacter use agar or film plate methods which are tedious and time-consuming with specialized labs required for the testing and results taking up to a week to produce.
Homogenizing the samples, creating dilutions, preparing the agar plates, replicating the samples up to 4-5 times each and then incubating for 48-72 hours to let bacteria grow is time and labor-intensive not to mention cost-prohibitive for frequent sampling.
Unlike these traditional testing methods, the GreenLightâ„¢ Model 910 reduces sample preparation time, the overall cost of testing and provides same-day results in 1-12 hours depending on bacterial load.
As bacteria in the test sample multiply and respire, they consume oxygen and this change in oxygen is used to calculate the original sample’s colony forming units per gram (CFU/g) for solids or per milliliter for liquids.
The small unit includes an easy-to-use PC software interface with multiple measurement modes. In addition, it provides the ability to generate a unique ID for each test so that it is simple to track specific batches.
This means that every single tank of milk could conceivably be tested before it is even bottled and purchased by the consumer!
While the type of bacteria detected in a given sample cannot yet be identified using the Greenlight 900 Series, this capability is expected to be available by the end of the year according to Mocon.
The unit costs about $9,000 and demos are available for farms that wish to try before they buy.
Raw Milk is Inherently Safe and Now Farmers Can Prove It – No Labs Required!
According to Dr. Ted Beals MD who compiled the CDC data that proves raw milk is safe:
It is irresponsible for senior national government officials to oppose raw milk, claiming that it is inherently hazardous. There is no justification for opposing the sale of raw milk or warning against its inclusion in the diets of children and adults.
While Dr. Beals’ analysis no doubt proves the case to those open-minded consumers willing to spend the time in research, old habits die hard and the government stance that “raw milk is dangerous” still needlessly scares away far too many consumers who could truly benefit from this nutrient-dense food.
Perhaps the advent of cost-effective, on-the-farm technology such as the Greenlight 900 Series will help pave the way for raw milk becoming the in vogue, popular health food it truly should be.
Sources
Mocon’s New Greenlight 910 Unit
Those Pathogens, What You Should Know
Jim
At least it isn’t totally illegal in the US like it is up here. It took me years to find a source for raw milk because farmers are so afraid of stupid laws. As revolutionary as this new technology is I doubt my new found friends could justify the price with their one Jersey 🙂
Trixie Grohman Ferguson via Facebook
Local raw milk here – there’s only ONE place I could find it, is $10/gallon. I can’t do it, so we don’t have milk. Sad because my daughter LOVES milk. When I was a kid – not THAT many years ago, we would take a jug down to the local dairy and buy a gallon of fresh, raw milk for $.25 gallon. Then the government had to put their noses in my business where it doesn’t belong and ruin everything. As usual.
Shaniq
Trixie. Pay it! Things will work out for you. Act in faith. No juice, no cable, no landline, only used clothes for my rapidly growing healthy son….but he gets his milk. Your daughters bones and organs in her childbearing years will thank you. The truth is coming out and people will eventually get the public servants to serve the public again. Blame inflation (another government construct), limited supply, and droughts not the farmer. To feed dairy cows to make creamy milk takes a LOT of grass & hay, which cows used to just graze, now farmers have to buy.
Jennifer Wiebusch via Facebook
Weren’t there some recent-ish reports of people in Pennsylvania getting sick from raw milk?
Ashley Kay Chennault via Facebook
Jerica.. I get that.. But we have 38 acres that we are about to set up with goats, cows, chickens, pigs, etc.. I don’t think I’ll know what a vacation is anyway ;)… And I can’t wait
Laura Genton via Facebook
I don’t. do you have a link? I’m almost 6 months pregnant and I’ve been drinking raw milk for years. I’ve been to the ranch that I buy from and am confident in the quality and health of what I’m getting.
Laura Genton via Facebook
$7 a gallon?! that’s cheap to me! the UHT organic milk around here is $5-6/gal, and I pay $10-12/gal for my raw local organic.
Nancy Keighley Petino via Facebook
There was a time when raw milk wasn’t safe – well, not the milk itself, but the farming practices in big cities (think Chicago stockyards at the turn of the last century) were so filthy that the only way to guarantee safety of the product was to boil it first. It was cheaper, easier, to Pasteurize the milk than clean up the cattle. It has always been safe on the small farm.
Deb Hollingsworth
Also New York poor little boys walked around barefooted in the winter and would milk the cows and place their filthy feet into the warm milk ti try to stay warm. That couldn’t be very healthy!
Whitney Gesch via Facebook
Does anyone remember women having miscarriages due to consuming raw milk? How does this change that? I’m not brill wing rude is really like to know.
Jerica Cadman via Facebook
Ashley, if you had your own cow, you would realize that $7/gallon is quite a bargain. Think… no vacations. Ever. That’s dairy farming. 🙂
Sara Campilii via Facebook
Did anyone see the new Gain fabric softer commercial where “fresh is best” and the woman milks the cow right into her cup and drinks it? thehealthyhomeeconomist