PETA's Violent Anti-Fur Ad Banned in Britain

Lately there have been a string of stories about how People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals has tried to tone down its image since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, but in fact PETA has hardly missed a beat. For example, it has been trying to run a violent anti-fur ad in Great Britain.

The ad features a woman wearing a fur coat being clubbed to death at a shopping center. This week Great Britain’s Cinema Advertising Association ruled that the advertisement could not be shown in British movie theaters. No ad can run in a movie theater without first obtaining CAA approval.

Ananova quoted a CAA spokeswoman as saying the ad broke CAA guidelines through its use of violence and for being too sensationalistic.

Source:

Shock animal rights advert banned from cinemas. Ananova, May 29, 2002.

Andrew Blake, 39, Dead

Andrew Blake, the founder of Seriously Ill for Medical Research and a tireless advocate for animal research, died this month at the age of 39.

As a teenager Blake was diagnosed with Friedrich’s ataxia — a genetic disease that affects about 1 out of every 50,000 Europeans and kills most of its sufferers in early adulthood. By the time he was 17, Blake was in a wheelchair.

In 1990, Blake was appalled after animal rights terrorists planted bombs in an attempt to kill medical researcher Max Headly and veterinarian Margaret Baskerville. After learning there was no organization dedicated to defending medical research with animals, Blake started Seriously Ill for Medical Research.

The Independent (London) newspaper talked about the nasty hate mail Blake received from compassionate animal rights activists,

He would shock journalists by showing them the hate mail he received. “I hope you die in agony, you cripple” was a typical message. He was unfazed by it. Activists also pasted libelous posters about Blake in the village where he lived.

Seriously Ill for Medical Research will continue on. As Vicky Cowell, chair of SIMR, wrote last week,

The greatest tribute SIMR, and its vast array of Members and Friends, can pay Andrew is to continue his legacy. You can be assured that everyone involved in the day-to-day running of the organization will be doing their utmost to ensure this happens. Over the years the organization, that was once Andrew’s dream, has gone from strength to strength. Eleven years on, SIMR is a force to be reckoned with. It will continue to grow and to gain momentum. Some dreams do come true!

Sources:

Obituary: Andrew Blake; Tireless Campaigner for Medical Research. Caroline Richmond, The Independent (London), May 29, 2002.

ANDREW BLAKE – 22.3.63 – 24.5.02. Vicky Cowell, Seriously Ill for Medical Research, May 25, 2002.

Does Milk Cause Diabetes?

In a recent e-mail dispatch, Robert Cohen went on at length about the evils of Abbott Laboratories for Pediasure, a nutritional supplement marketed for children ages 1-10.

Cohen writes in his inimitably bizarre style,

Child abuse comes in many forms. Pediaphiles [sic] are child abusers. Pediatrics is the field of medicine dedicated to childhood diseases. The most respected pediatrician to have ever lived, Dr. Benjamin Spock, advised that no child should ever drink cow’s milk, Pediatricians who advise mothers to feed their children bovine secretions can be classified as ignorant child abusers.

. . .

A visit to Abbot Lab’s website reveals a company that is big on diabetes medicines. How ironic. One of the major components of Pediasure is whey protein. The most abundant protein in concentrated whey powder is bovine serum albumin.

On July 30, 1992, the New England Journal of Medicine reported:

“Studies have suggested that bovine serum albumin is the milk protein responsible for the onset of diabetes.”

The claim that bovine serum albumin is a major cause of Type 1 diabetes is one that is repeated incessantly on animal rights web sites, but the reality is a lot less dramatic.

The 1992 NEJM study that Cohen refers to involved Finnish and Canadian researchers who discovered that children with Type 1 diabetes that they examined turned out to have elevated levels of anti-BSA antibodies. In the Finnish case, 100 percent of the children with Type 1 diabetes had high levels of anti-BSA antibodies.

Most animal rights sites tend to cite only this study. They never cite Jill Norris’ 1996 study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association which, unlike the 1992 report, had a control group.

Norris and others examined 253 children from families that were genetically prone to Type 1 diabetes, and tested them for beta-cell autoimmunity, which is a common precursor to diabetes. Eighteen children had beta-cell autoimmunity. She then added a control group of 163 children who were BCA-negative as a control group. The results?

There were no differences in the proportion of cases and
controls who were exposed to cow’s milk or foods containing cow’s milk or to cereal, fruit and vegetable or meat protein by 3 months or by 6 months of age. These data suggest that early exposure to cow’s milk or other dietary protein is not associated with BCA. This calls into question the
importance of cow’s milk avoidance as a preventive measure for
IDDM.

Part of the problem with the few studies that have found a connection between early exposure to milk and diabetes is that they may not have included accurate information about when infants first consumed milk. Norris specifically constructed her study to minimize this problem,

Our study was designed to overcome what we perceived as limitations in the collection of infant diet information of the previous research. Specifically, we shortened the amount of time that parents had to remember their child’s infant diet, which would likely improve the accuracy of the information. Also, we collected the diet information from the parents before they knew whether their child had beta-cell autoimmunity. Previous studies had collected this from parents of children who already had diabetes, and it has been suggested that parents of sick children respond differently to questions such as these than parents of healthy children.

These improvements in the collection of the infant diet may explain, in part, why our findings are contrary to those of previous studies, which have suggested a 60% increased risk of diabetes if the child had been exposed to cow’s milk by 3 months of age.

In some of the studies that found a link between milk consumption and diabetes, for example, parent were asked to recall their children’s eating habits as infants more than 10 to 15 years after the fact.

Other studies that have looked at infants have come to largely the same conclusion as Norris. University of Florida researchers Mark Atkinson and Noel Maclaren, for example, found that only 10 percent of newly diagnosed diabetics had anti-BSA antibodies. Atkinson wrote a 1996 article for The Lancet outlining the methodological problems with studies that found a link between early milk consumption and diabetes.

Not surprisingly, Robert Cohen has on occasion cited articles by Atkinson suggesting that Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease, but Cohen conveniently leaves out any citations to Atkinson and Maclaren’s debunking of the milk hypothesis.

One of the major outcomes of research into whether milk or a virus or other environmental factors cause Type 1 diabetes has lead many researchers to the conclusion that the disease does not have a simple, one-factor cause. Instead, Type 1 diabetes is likely a combination of genetic and environmental factors of which milk may or may not play a part.

As Atkinson pointed out in his Lancet article, however, there is clear epidemiological evidence that milk does not play the sort of key role that animal rights activists like to pretend. Finland, Atkinson pointed out, consumes about twice as much milk as Sardinia does, and yet the two countries have similar rates of Type 1 diabetes.

Sources:

Not so sure about Pediasure. Robert Cohen, Notmilk Newsletter Digest, May 29, 2002.

Florida Researchers: Formula-Fed Babies Are Not At Greater Risk For Diabetes. Melanie Fridl Ross, University of Florida, May 29, 1996.

Cow’s Milk Not Linked to Type 1 Diabetes. ChildrenWithDiabetes.Com, August 28, 1996.

Follow-Up to Cow’s Milk Not Linked to Type 1 Diabetes Report. ChildrenWithDiabetes.Com, September 14, 1996.

Electronic Food Rap. Bill Evers, PhD, RD and April Mason, PhD, VOL. 6 NO. 43, 1996.

NOTMILK – – – SHARE THIS WITH A DIABETIC FRIEND. Robert Cohen, August 24, 2000.

The Diabetes Research Pipeline. Robert S. Dinsmoor, Juvenile Diabetes Foundation, Summer 2001.

Common Class of Viruses Implicated as Cause of Type 1 Diabetes. Thomas H. Maugh II, Los Angeles Times, 1994.

Milk & diabetes. Judy Ismach, Physicians Weekly, Septebmer 15, 1997, Vol.XIV, No.35.

British Farm Convicted on Nine Counts Related to Foot and Mouth Disease Outbreak

British pig farmer Bobby Waugh was convicted this week on nine of 15 counts he had been charge with in relation to the 2001 outbreak of foot and mouth disease in the United Kingdom. Waugh will face sentencing on June 28. Waugh could face up to 6 months in prison.

Waugh was convicted of five counts of failing to notify authorities of an outbreak of foot and mouth disease, one count of feeding unprocessed waste to his pigs, one count of failing to properly dispose of animal waste, and two counts of causing unnecessary animal suffering.

Waugh’s farm appears to have been the initial source for the foot and mouth disease outbreak. Waugh’s pigs apparently contracted the disease after he gave them feed that had not been properly processed.

Waugh claimed he had no idea his pigs had contracted foot and mouth disease, but a video introduced during the trial shows his pigs suffering from what is clearly foot and mouth disease.

By failing to report the disease outbreak promptly, Waugh allowed what would have been an extremely localized event to expand into a large scale outbreak of foot and mouth disease that cost British farmers as much as $3 billion.

Source:

Farmer kept quit about disease. The BBC, May 30, 2002.

Poverty Is the Real Pollution

This web site has stayed out of the controversy over Bjorn Lomborg’s book, The Skeptical Environmentalist, though from the reviews and discussion, there is much it would agree with as well as some parts it would disagree. We wholeheartedly agree, however, with Lomborg’s comments to the BBC about the United Nations’ recent Global Environment Outlook-3 report which complained about the increasingly negative impact that humanity is having on the world’s ecosystems. The BBC quoted Lomborg as replying,

We think things are getting worse and worse but actually if we look at the facts we see that fewer and fewer people are starving, we’re better able to handle pollution in the developed world (for instance, air pollution) and in the developing world, it will be the same when they get sufficiently rich.

What we need to realize is that the real pollution problem is the pollution of poverty; when people are poor they cannot take care of the environment 10 or a 100 years down the line.

Eliminate the sort of abject poverty present in the developing world and many of the environmental problems would correct themselves as those societies were able to devote more of their resources to environmental protection.

Source:

Poverty is ‘real pollution’. The BBC, May 22, 2002

Small Study Suggests Benefit to Enriched Eggs for Infants

A study published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition suggested that enriched egg yolks could improve the level of essential nutrients in weaning infants.

The study involved 137 infants about 6 months of age. The infants were randomly sorted into three groups that received either normal egg yolks, egg yolks from chickens that were fed a diet rich in n-3 fatty acids, or no egg yolk at all.

Researchers then measured levels of both iron and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA). Breast milk tends to have a low iron content, while children formula fed children tend to have lower levels of DHA (which is important for brain development — many formula makers now fortify their formula with DHA).

Both breast and formula-fed infants who were given the DHA-enriched egg yolks experienced 30 to 40 percent higher DHA levels than those fed the normal egg yolks. Both groups increased their iron levels.

As a BBC report on the study noted, egg yolks have the advantage of containing heme iron, which is more easily absorbed than iron from vegetables, as well as being soft enough for babies to eat.

Source:

Egg boost for babies. The BBC, May 23, 2002.