100,000 Person Study Reveals Drinking Milk Increases Chance Of Osteoporosis

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Milk is marketed as a great source of calcium, but in fact pasteurized milk is not. This 100,000 people study is pretty good proof of that. You be the judge! Check out the article we found over at Real Farmacy.

Milk is the only beverage still aggressively pushed on children as a health promoting food when it is the exact opposite – a disease promoting food. Drinking pasteurized milk is not nearly as good for general health or bones as the dairy industry has made it out to be. In fact, this fairy tale of “milk doing a body good” is being exposed more frequently by many independent scientists and researchers who have had just about enough of the propaganda.

According to a large scale study of thousands of Swedish people, cow’s milk has a deteriorating effect on health when consumed in the long-term. The research was published in The British Medical Journal (BMJ).

The study, which tracked 61,433 women aged 39 to 74 over 20 years, and 45,339 men of similar age for 11 years, found that the more cow’s milk people drank, the more likely they were to die or experience a bone fracture during the study period.

The risks were especially pronounced for women, a group advised to drink milk to help avoid bone fractures that result from osteoporosis.

Women who said they drank three or more glasses of milk a day had almost double the chance of bread-217056_1280-300x199dying during the study period as those who reported drinking only one. A glass is defined as a 200 milliliter serving. They also had a 16 percent higher chance of getting a bone fracture anywhere in the body.

Why Does Milk Cause Osteoporosis and Bone Fractures

The dairy industry has been hard at work the last 50 years convincing people that pasteurized dairy products such as milk or cheese increases bioavailable calcium levels. This is totally false. The pasteurization process only creates calcium carbonate, which has absolutely no way of entering the cells without a chelating agent. So what the body does is pull the calcium from the bones and other tissues in order to buffer the calcium carbonate in the blood. This process actually causes osteoporosis.

Pasteurized dairy contains too little magnesium needed at the proper ratio to absorb the calcium. Most would agree that a minimum amount of Cal. to Mag Ratio is 2 to 1 and preferably 1 to 1. So milk, at a Cal/Mag ratio of 10 to 1, has a problem. You may put 1200 mg of dairy calcium in your mouth, but you will be lucky to actually absorb a third of it into your system.

Over 99% of the body’s calcium is in the skeleton, where it provides mechanical rigidity. Pasteurized dairy forces a calcium intake lower than normal and the skeleton is used as a reserve to meet needs. Long-term use of skeletal calcium to meet these needs leads to osteoporosis.

Dairy is pushed on Americans from birth yet they have one of the highest risk of osteoporosis in the world. Actually, people from the USA, Canada, Norway, Sweden, Australia, and New Zealand have the highest rates of osteoporosis.

The test for pasteurization is called the negative alpha phosphatase test. When milk has been heated to 165 degrees (higher for UHT milk) and pasteurization is complete, the enzyme phosphatase is 100 percent destroyed. Guess what? This is the enzyme that is critical for the absorption of minerals including calcium! Phosphatase is the third most abundant enzyme in raw milk and those who drink raw milk enjoy increased bone density. Several studies have documented greater bone density and longer bones in animals and humans consuming raw milk compared to pasteurized.

Next Article: Harvard Research Specialist Urges People To Stop Drinking Low-Fat Milk

Read full article: 100,000 Person Study Reveals This Causes Early Death

 



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13 Responses to “100,000 Person Study Reveals Drinking Milk Increases Chance Of Osteoporosis”

  1. Janita Rogers

    Feb 02. 2016

    Milk have calcium in it it is good for your bones pass it on

    Reply to this comment
  2. EDlover Leon

    Feb 03. 2016

    I ate lots of cheese, and drank lots of milk and now I have osteoporosis. So much for milk !

    Reply to this comment
  3. Becky Wilhelm Parker

    Feb 03. 2016

    Did you read the study?

    Reply to this comment
  4. Christina Hofmann

    Feb 03. 2016

    Janita Rogers, are you a doctor to give such advices?

    Reply to this comment
  5. Amy Carroll Duncan

    Feb 03. 2016

    Greg Duncan

    Reply to this comment
  6. Amy Carroll Duncan

    Feb 03. 2016

    Greg Duncan Ken Duncan Craig James Douglas

    Reply to this comment
  7. Jocelyne Hubert

    Feb 03. 2016

    Milk is so bad for your body!!!

    Reply to this comment
  8. Craig James Douglas

    Feb 04. 2016

    wow

    Reply to this comment
  9. Cj Campbell

    Feb 05. 2016

    careful following links provided with this article, when I clicked them virus warnings popped up, seems like a scam to me if you cannot check out the studies referred to. Just my opinion. Drink milk and eat cheese regularly , I am over 50 not overweight and have never broke a bone. Sounds like some lactose intolerant person is just angry at Dairy farmers.

    Reply to this comment
  10. Judy Olah

    Feb 15. 2016

    I have just looked at this page for the first time. What strikes me practically every post if anyone has a question, or not sure, or disputes what is being said – there is no answer. She just leaves you to it. If you’re going to post stuff then not be prepared to engage in discussion, why bother?

    Reply to this comment
  11. Denise L Siedlecki

    Mar 14. 2017

    Great

    Reply to this comment
  12. Oil Supplements

    Oct 26. 2017

    gosh

    Reply to this comment
  13. Oil Supplements

    Dec 05. 2017

    tg 🙂

    Reply to this comment

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