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Dairy ranks No.1 for foodborne-illness hospitalizations, CDC study says

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The data didn’t distinguish between pasteurized and unpasteurized products, which critics said was a flaw in the study.

“To say that raw dairy is likely to cause many foodborne illness outbreaks, when the study doesn’t even have any statistics to back that up, is speculation,” said Kimberly Hartke, spokeswoman for the Real Milk Campaign, a Washington, D.C.-based advocate for raw milk products.

But a CDC study published a year ago found the rate for disease outbreaks caused by raw dairy products was 150 times higher than for pasteurized milk. That study said that milk consumption was responsible for 121 disease outbreaks, causing 4,413 illnesses, 239 hospitalizations and three deaths from 1993 to 2006 — and that raw milk products were the cause of 60 percent of the outbreaks.

With few exceptions, Wisconsin prohibits the sale of raw milk to the public because it may contain bacteria that cause foodborne illnesses. But raw milk advocates have repeatedly pressed for state legislation that would legalize the sales. One of the biggest arguments against legalizing raw milk sales has been the damage that could be inflicted on the state’s $26 billion dairy industry should there be an illness outbreak.

“The damage to Wisconsin’s No. 1 agricultural industry could be immense and irreversible,” according to Cooperative Network, a Wisconsin and Minnesota trade association that represents all types of cooperatives, including cooperatives that market more than 80 percent of the milk produced on Wisconsin farms.

Wisconsin Farm Bureau Federation, the state’s largest farm association, also opposes raw milk sales to the general public.

“If a person becomes ill from drinking raw milk, it is not only unpasteurized milk that gets a bad image, but all milk and dairy products. Dairy farmers have invested millions of dollars promoting milk and dairy products. They cannot afford to have an incident adversely affect consumption. Whether food scares are real or perceived, farmers are the first to see a decline in the prices they receive for the livestock, crops and commodities they produce,” the Farm Bureau said in April 2010 testimony against raw milk legislation.

With pasteurization, milk is briefly heated to a temperature high enough to kill off most bacteria. Food safety officials say it’s essential, since pathogens in untreated milk may cause severe illness or even death.

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