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Got Bone Problems?
by Brian Clement • West Palm Beach, FL
Dairy industry media
marketing campaigns
tell us that “no matter
what your age, dairy’s nutrients
are an essential part of
promoting good bone health,”
the National Dairy Council’s
website claims.
There is “overwhelming scientific evidence,”
says the Council, that consuming
milk, cheese and yogurt throughout your
life “may delay or minimize age-related
bone loss and thereby decrease the risk for
osteoporosis.”
The reason cited, of course, is that dairy
contains calcium. Parents are urged by the
dairy industry to feed children ages two
to eight a minimum of two cups of milk
or equivalent milk products each day to
insure adequate bone growth. This amount
is a lot of dairy for little bodies to absorb!
In answer to these industry claims, scientists
at the Harvard School of Public
Health posted on its website this rebuttal:
“Calcium is important. But milk isn’t the
only, or even best, source.” These experts
note how high intakes of dairy “can
increase the risk of prostate cancer and
possibly ovarian cancer,” and how “dairy
products can be high in saturated fat as
well as retinol (vitamin A) which at high
levels can paradoxically weaken bones.”
Hip fractures may be the most common
type of bone injury experienced by the
elderly, particularly women at any age. Yet,
not only is there little persuasive evidence
that milk and dairy protect against fractures,
the weight of study evidence shows just the
opposite. To illustrate what I mean, a 2003
study published in the American Journal
of Clinical Nutrition followed 72,337 postmenopausal
women for 18 years to chronicle
their dietary habits and incidence of hip
fractures. Neither the women’s total calcium
intake nor their level of milk consumption
“was associated with a lower risk of hip fracture.”
Still another study, this one involving
77,761 women ages 34 through 59 years,
who were monitored over a 12 year period,
“found no evidence that higher intakes of
milk or calcium from food sources reduce
fracture (hip or forearm) incidence.”
Nor does milk consumption, despite what
the dairy industry implores us to believe,
improve the bone health of children. This
was the conclusion of a 2005 review of the evidence published in the authoritative
journal, Pediatrics. Physically active adolescent
girls who consume the most dairy
products actually experience double the
risk of stress fractures compared to young
women who aren’t big dairy consumers.
The bone degeneration disease known as
osteoporosis is a significant problem in the
U.S. and many other countries. More than
one in three British women, for instance,
currently suffers from osteoporosis. Even though American women are thought to
consume as much or more calcium as any
group of women in the world, they still
record some of the highest osteoporosis
rates. For people over the age of 50, one in
two women will break a bone as a result of
osteoporosis having weakened them.
“To assume that osteoporosis is due to
calcium deficiency is like assuming that
infection is due to penicillin deficiency,”
said Harvard University professor of
nutrition, Mark Hegsted. Over several
decades of testing the bodies of hundreds
of thousands of people for minerals, it
has been rare for us at The Hippocrates
Health Institute to find persons who lack
sufficient calcium in their bodies. Silica
and strontium are common deficiencies
relating to bone loss. Lack of resistance
exercise, combined with these nutrient
deficiencies, are paramount factors in creating
hard tissue degeneration.
Something else the dairy industry fails to
alert consumers about is that the animal protein found in dairy products has an
amino acid called methionine, with a high
sulfur content. This protein also harbors
massive amounts of phosphorous. Together,
these elements impair the human body’s
ability to keep calcium levels in
balance, thus contributing to bone
loss.
So how can you protect your
bone health throughout life without
dairy products? According
to the Physicians Committee
for Responsible Medicine: “You
can decrease your risk of osteoporosis
by reducing sodium,
increasing your intake of fruits
and vegetables, exercising, and
ensuring adequate calcium
intake from plant foods such as
kale, broccoli, and other leafy
green vegetables and beans.”
Calcium from plants is much
more easily absorbed by your
body than calcium from dairy products.
Calcium isn’t “cowcium,” I’ve heard it
said, and you can get rich and nutritionally
absorbable levels of it from not only kale
and broccoli, but from sunflower seeds,
almonds, and pistachio nuts.
In China, with its relatively low dairy
consumption rates, most calcium in the
diet comes from vegetables and as a consequence,
osteoporosis hasn’t come close
to the levels seen in Western dairy-diet
cultures. As Professor Colin Campbell
has observed in his landmark book, The
China Study, “the association between the
intake of animal protein and fracture rates
appears to be as strong as that between
cigarette smoking and lung cancer.” The
more dairy and meat you eat, the more
this protein load strains your kidneys,
and that will leach calcium from your
body. You should also know that certain
foods and drinks high in oxalic acid (such as coffee and chocolate) impede the
absorption of calcium by your body.
Also keep in mind that natural sunlight
providing vitamin D is important to proper
calcium absorption. So absorb some sunlight
in modest amounts whenever
you can, and while you are doing
that, engage in some form of fast
walking and other vigorous muscle
and bone enhancing exercises.
If this had been a trial of dairy
industry marketing claims and
the evidence for a link between
various dairy products and bone
health was weighed by a jury,
I think the verdict would be: Guilty of false advertising. If this
had been a trial of evidence associating
hip and other fractures
along with osteoporosis to dairy
consumption, once again I know
a jury would return a verdict of
Guilty as charged.
Excerpted from Dairy Deception ©2014,
with permission of The Hippocrates Health
Institute.
For more than four decades, Brian Clement has been Co-director (along with his wife, Anna Maria) of The Hippocrates Health
Institute in West Palm Beach, FL, which
had been lauded by Spa Management magazine
as “the number one wellness spa in the
world.” Nearly 400,000 people from over 50
countries have been guests in the health and
wellness program at Hippocrates. Many were
there to recover from illnesses and diseases
that mainstream medicine had failed to
treat. With training as a PhD nutritionist,
naturopathic medical doctor, and health
consultant and lecturer, Dr. Clement makes
appearances dozens of times a year before
national and international audiences speaking
on health, healing, nutrition and longevity.
Learn more by visiting the Institute’s
website at: www.hippocratesinstitute.org.
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