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- THE WEEK, Page 33HEALTH & SCIENCETilting at Sacred Cows
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- A group of doctors bad-mouth milk, shaking up parents and
- pediatricians
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- As if parents did not have enough to worry about, the
- Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine is trying to make
- them feel guilty about giving milk to their children. At a press
- conference in Boston, a group of well-known physicians,
- including, of all people, Dr. Benjamin Spock, questioned the
- nutritional value of cow's milk and warned that it could
- actually prove harmful to some youngsters. "There's no reason
- to drink cow's milk at any time in your life," said Dr. Frank
- Oski, director of pediatrics at the Johns Hopkins University.
- "It was designed for calves, it was not designed for humans, and
- we should all stop drinking it today, this afternoon."
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- Can it be all that bad? To be sure, dairy products are not
- the only source of such vital nutrients as calcium and
- phosphorus. A cup of milk provides 300 mg of calcium, compared
- with 250 mg for a cup of cooked kale. And O.K., some children
- are allergic to milk and therefore must get their calcium and
- other minerals from other foods. But for most children over the
- age of one, cow's milk is a perfectly adequate source of several
- important nutrients.
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- "These recommendations by the Physicians Committee for
- Responsible Medicine are very irresponsible," says Dr. Ronald
- Kleinman, chair of the Committee on Nutrition for the American
- Academy of Pediatrics. The academy agrees that breast milk or
- iron-fortified infant formula is best for the first 12 months
- of life. "But we don't say that babies are going to be harmed
- by cow's milk or that there is a danger to them," Kleinman
- notes. "Dairy products are not perfect foods, but they are
- concentrated with many of the forms of nutrients that children
- need to grow well."
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