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<text id=93TT1686>
<title>
May 17, 1993: Udder Insanity!
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
May 17, 1993 Anguish over Bosnia
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
SCIENCE, Page 52
Udder Insanity!
</hdr>
<body>
<p>A battle is raging over the safety of milk from cows treated
with a genetically engineered hormone
</p>
<p>By PHILIP ELMER-DEWITT--With reporting by Janice M. Horowitz/
New York and Dick Thompson/Washington
</p>
<p> It's the drink of choice for young children, one of
nature's most perfect foods. Sure, it's a little heavy on fat,
but to Americans at least, a tall glass of milk remains an icon
of health, nutrition and clean-cut values--the drink Mom
pours for you when she serves her apple pie. No wonder, then,
that the ground seemed to tremble a bit in the nation's capital
last week when the biotechnology industry faced off with
consumer advocates over a matter of concern to every U.S.
household: Do new high-tech production methods threaten the
safety of American milk?
</p>
<p> The immediate question, debated with considerable heat
before two Food and Drug Administration advisory panels, was
whether to require special labels on milk from cows given a
synthetic hormone to increase their production. Consumer
advocates led by the anti-biotech gadfly Jeremy Rifkin shout
yes, insisting that such milk could represent a health threat.
The biotech industry, which has millions at stake, naturally
disagrees, and it has the support of many government scientists
who have found the milk to be safe.
</p>
<p> Caught in the middle are the nation's 140,000 dairy
farmers who, having run up a milk surplus for at least a dozen
years, are split on whether the extra milk production is a good
thing and convinced that the consumer controversy is not.
</p>
<p> The controversy is not likely to go away. At week's end
the panels adjourned without making a formal recommendation on
the labeling issue to FDA Commissioner David Kessler. Most
panel members felt that the disputed labels should not be
required. They also believed that milk processors ought to be
able to advertise their products as hormone free, although it
is not clear whether the FDA will allow that. Both sides felt
that they had lost something, and those who wanted the hormone
banned outright vowed to take their case to shoppers across the
U.S.
</p>
<p> The substance at the center of the dispute is a naturally
occurring protein known to scientists as bovine somatotropin,
or more simply, bovine growth hormone (BGH). Dairy farmers have
known for decades that cows given booster shots of BGH would
produce more milk--up to 15% more. But the only available
source of the hormone was the pituitary glands of butchered
cows, which yield only minute quantities. Then, in 1982,
scientists used new gene-splicing techniques to manipulate
bacteria into mass-producing BGH. By the mid-1980s, four drug
companies--including Monsanto and Eli Lilly--had applied to
the FDA for permission to market the product.
</p>
<p> The drug companies hoped that BGH would be biotech's first
big agricultural success. The estimated worldwide market: $1
billion a year. Given the green light for small-scale testing,
they administered BGH to 20,000 dairy cows--less than 1% of
the U.S. herd--and as predicted, milk production shot up.
</p>
<p> But on the way to its first billion, BGH ran into a major
roadblock: Rifkin. The activist has campaigned against
everything from the space shuttle to beef consumption, but his
single biggest beef is about genetically engineered food
products.
</p>
<p> At first glance, Rifkin's position on BGH--that all
dairy products from BGH-treated cows should be clearly labeled--seems perfectly sensible. After all, shouldn't consumers get
the data they need to make an informed choice? But Rifkin
himself isn't above misleading the consumer. One of his anti-BGH
ads shows a young child with a glass of milk and a caption that
reads, "Was there a dose of artificial growth hormone in her
milk this morning?"
</p>
<p> Scientists at the National Institutes of Health and the
FDA have found that, in fact, there is no elevated level of BGH
in the milk of cows who received the hormone. "Milk from
treated and untreated cows is functionally and biologically the
same," asserts Lisa Watson, a Monsanto spokeswoman, who points
to a list of scientific groups, including the American Medical
Association, that endorse the safety of milk from BGH-treated
cows.
</p>
<p> But Monsanto and others in the biotech industry are not
being entirely forthcoming either. While hormones in the milk
may be a false issue, there are other concerns about using BGH.
Michael Hansen, a research associate at Consumers Union,
charges that Monsanto suppressed data that would have put its
product in an unfavorable light. The biggest issue, he and other
scientists say, is that the hormone can lead to udder infections
that not only are painful to cows but also could have
consequences for those who drink the milk. Farmers treat the
animals with powerful antibiotics that find their way into milk.
Humans who drink the stuff can harbor bacteria that develop
resistance to those antibiotics, and thus run the risk of
developing infections that are hard to treat.
</p>
<p> The dairy industry, for its part, says consumers needn't
worry about antibiotics, because milk is routinely tested for
the drugs and if they are found, the milk is discarded. Rifkin
says such testing is insufficient.
</p>
<p> Many of the nation's smaller dairy farmers are on Rifkin's
side in the BGH battle. They are afraid that the hormone will
produce a milk glut and drive down prices. But what dairy
farmers large and small fear most is that the BGH controversy
will scare off customers. Firms that have staked their
reputation on purity--manufacturers of baby formula and
whole-earth companies like Ben & Jerry's and Stonyfield Farm--have publicly forsworn the use of the hormone. Market surveys
bear out industry concern, predicting a 10% decline in national
milk consumption should BGH be widely used.
</p>
<p> Last week's events put FDA Commissioner Kessler in the hot
seat. Kessler made his mark as a champion of consumers' rights
and clear food labeling. But there are cases where labeling
creates a misleading impression, and this may be one of them.
"Where do you draw the line?" asks a policy expert at the FDA.
"Do you label all the biotech products? Do you list all the
fertilizers? All the pesticides?"
</p>
<p> Kessler is likely to approve BGH for commercial use, but
he will find himself under pressure to defend the decision to
a fearful and skeptical public. Rifkin promises to make things
as difficult as possible. He is set to launch a yearlong
anti-BGH campaign that includes full-page newspaper ads,
30-second TV and radio spots, and a grass-roots boycott of
companies that continue to use the hormone. "We've got a short
list of potential targets," he declared before a packed hearing
room last week. "Kraft, are you here? Safeway, are you here?
Land-O-Lakes, are you here?"
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>