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When Friends Ask: Where Do You Get Your Calcium?
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(Article last updated in September 2009)
When Friends Ask Where Do You Get Your Calcium?
Index to this page:
Introduction
Misinformation Is Promoted for Profits
Calcium Is a Mineral Found in the Ground
Calcium Is a Necessary Nutrient
Human Calcium Needs Are Surprisingly Low
An Unnaturally Low Calcium Diet Can Cause Rickets
Dairy Foods Are Found Unnecessary for Children
Dairy-Industry Funded Research Shows Little Benefit for Adults
They
Are Just Doing Their Job - Selling Cow’s Milk to People
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Introduction
One of the first questions concerned family and
friends ask when they learn you have become vegan and now avoid all animal
products, including dairy products is, “Where do you get your calcium?”
Begin your dialog with them by assuming that the questioners have sincere
interests in expanding their knowledge about good nutrition - rather than just
them trying to prove your diet is deficient, and to justify their daily eating
of Ben and Jerry’s Homemade Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough Ice Cream and French
brie ripened to perfection with a bottle of deliciously dry white wine.
Misinformation
Is Promoted for Profits
We have all grown up educated about proper
nutrition by the food industries, and the leader in “diet schooling” is
the dairy industry. You might remember, at the center of these instructional
campaigns has been “a teaching cow:” In my youth, living in the Mid-west,
I learned about the importance of “milk for building strong bones” from
Elsie, the cow. Lani Moo took over my eduction on “never out growing my need
for milk” when I moved to Hawaii as a young doctor in the early 70s. In the
mid 80s we settled in Northern California where Clo, the cow, provided
dairy-friendly advice from billboards lining Highway 101. These cows are
innocent participants in the enormous marketing efforts to sell products to
correct a non-existent problem: dietary calcium deficiency.
One nutrient stands out as especially abundant in dairy foods: calcium. You
might expect marketers to exploit this feature to sell cow’s milk to
customers. To do this they had to create the fear that without their products,
uniquely concentrated in calcium, people will develop disease—in this case
fragile bones. In the USA, the variety of dairy industries combine into a
greater than a $50 billion-a-year business, which raises and spends $206.5
million dollars annually to spread the myth that dairy foods are not only a
healthy choice, but are also essential to avoid becoming sick.1 They write,
“To meet calcium recommendations, increased consumption of calcium-rich
foods such as milk and other dairy foods, often is necessary. Unfortunately,
few Americans consume sufficient calcium, thereby increasing their risk for
major chronic diseases such as osteoporosis.”2 And their fear mongering is
working: Today, the average person consumes more than 593 pounds of dairy
products annually, compared to 522 pounds in 1983.3
Calcium
Is a Mineral Found in the Ground
Ask first, where does calcium come from? I mean
originally? The source of all calcium is the soils of the earth. Animals do
not eat ground—so how do they obtain this essential mineral? Plants absorb
this basic element, present in watery solutions, through their roots, and then
incorporate it into their various tissues—roots, stems, leaves, flowers, and
fruits. Animals then eat the plant parts to obtain calcium and all other
essential minerals. Acting as the sole conduit, plants are loaded with
minerals, in amounts sufficient to grow the skeletons of the largest animals
that walk the earth, like the elephant, hippopotamus, giraffe, horse, and cow.
Since these massive bones can be formed from the raw materials of plants, you
can assume there is sufficient calcium in vegetable foods to grow the
relatively small bones of a human being. Current observations and human
history prove this: Most people who have ever walked this earth have grown
their normal-sized adult skeletons without the aid of milk (other than
mother’s milk during the first two years of life) and without concentrated
calcium pill supplements.

Calcium
Is a Necessary Nutrient
Calcium is essential for all living organisms -
microbes, plants, and animals. The average adult body contains approximately 1
kg (2.2 pounds) of calcium. This represents the most abundant mineral in the
human body and bones serve as an important storage depot for this calcium -
99% of it is found in the skeleton in the form of calcium phosphate salts. In
mammals, calcium plays a crucial role in processes ranging from the formation
of the skeleton to the regulation of nervous tissue and blood vessel function.
Calcium balance is maintained by the actions of three organ systems -
gastrointestinal tract, bone, and kidney.
These three organs are precise and efficient at regulating the amount of
calcium in our bodies. If our diet is relatively low in calcium, then the
cells of the intestinal tract will act more vigorously and absorb a higher
percentage of the calcium from the food. At the same time, the kidneys will
act to conserve the body’s calcium. On the other hand, if we follow the
messages of the calcium industries and begin consuming glassfuls of milk or
handsful of supplements then the intestinal cells will act with their innate
intelligence to block out the entrance of most of this concentrated calcium,
and the kidneys will simultaneously eliminate any excess. If this were not the
case, then the influx of excess calcium would by necessity be deposited in the
soft tissues of the body - heart, kidneys, muscles, skin - and we would become
sick and could die. Clearly, the body has many integrated mechanisms to assure
that the proper balance of essential minerals is maintained - regardless of
the choices we may make at the fast food window.
Human
Calcium Needs Are Surprisingly Low
A recent study of Inuit (Eskimo) children found
their diet, consisting largely of meat (which has almost no calcium), provided
about 120 mg of calcium daily, but because of their physiologic adaptations
these children were found to be healthy.4 As long ago as 1978 Paterson wrote
in the Postgraduate Medical Journal, “Many official bodies give advice on
desirable intakes of calcium but no clear evidence of a calcium deficiency
disease in otherwise normal people has ever been given. In Western countries
the usual calcium intake is of the order of 800-1000 mg/day; in many
developing countries figures of 300-500 mg/day are found. There is no evidence
that people with such a low intake have any problems with bones or teeth. It
seems likely that normal people can adapt to have a normal calcium balance on
calcium intakes as low as 150-200 mg/day and that this adaptation is
sufficient even in pregnancy and lactation. Inappropriate concern about
calcium intake may divert attention and resources from more important
nutritional problems.”5 And that is exactly what the talented marketing
people in the dairy industry have done with the help of friendly government
officials in the USDA: they have placed the spotlight on the nutrient,
calcium, which is easily obtained in sufficient amounts from almost any diet -
and at the same time, taken the beam of truth off of the fat, cholesterol, and
contamination - the life-threatening components of dairy foods. One of the
ways this has been done is by sensationalizing rare cases of calcium
deficiency in children on bizarre diets.
An
Unnaturally Low Calcium Diet Can Cause Rickets
In the past I have said, “Calcium deficiency
is unknown in human beings.” In other words, there is no disease that has
ever been reported as due to too little calcium in a person’s diet. This
statement was based on a comprehensive review of the scientific literature
covering the various diets (with and without dairy foods) that people consume
worldwide. However, if you look hard enough, exceptions to generalizations,
such as the one I (and others) have made about the lack of calcium deficiency
in people can be found - and exploited.
Rare cases of a calcium deficiency condition called “nutritional rickets”
have been reported. Rickets is a condition of weakening of the bones of
children, leading to fractures and deformity. Inadequate vitamin D due to
insufficient exposure to sunlight is the recognized cause of almost all cases
of rickets. However, at the extremes of low calcium intake, caused by
consuming unusual diets, rickets can rarely occur even with adequate sunshine
exposure.6
Reported examples of children suffering from “nutritional rickets” fall
far outside what would be considered normal diets. For example, one case was
described in a 16-month-old girl, who, because of allergy to formula, was
raised on a mixture of applesauce and oatmeal - with no milk until after the
age of one-year.7 (She, of course, should have been on breast milk her first
year of life.) The authors felt the high phytate content of the oatmeal
impaired absorption of the calcium in her food, causing her disease. In
another report, three children, aged 15-18 months developed rickets due to a
diet of a commercial Soya-drink - not adapted for infants - as their main
source of nutrition for at least 6 months. The Soya-drink was extremely low in
calcium content.8
In rural Africa children ages 4-16 years have been found with active rickets
believed to be due to diets high in phytate with calcium intakes estimated to
be approximately 200 mg/day (a level significantly lower than other children
living in the same community).9 However, a study of one hundred and thirty
Ethiopian children under five years old with rickets on a lower calcium diet
showed this condition was always due to inadequate sunshine.10
So how have these rare cases of nutritional rickets from consuming bizarre
diets changed my claim that, “disease due to calcium deficiency is unknown
in humans?” I must now add to the end of the sentence this qualification:
“on natural diets.” Whole plant foods easily meet our needs for calcium
after infancy. (Human milk is the necessary food during the beginning years.)
Therefore, you can be reassured that you and your children cannot possibly
fail to consume sufficient calcium for all of your needs from a natural
plant-food-based diet, like the starch-based McDougall diet. If you do develop
such a problem, then you will make national headlines as the first reported
case - and you will become an important part of the dairy industry’s
advertising campaign - a shining example of what can happen when you fail to
follow their advice.
Dairy
Foods Are Found Unnecessary for Children
Contrary to the dairy industries marketing
campaign, reviews of the scientific literature have concluded extra dietary
calcium during childhood does not build strong bones. A review published in
the March 2005 issue of the Journal of Pediatrics focused on the benefits of
dairy products on bone health and concluded, “Scant evidence supports
nutrition guidelines focused specifically on increasing milk or other dairy
product intake for promoting child and adolescent bone mineralization.”11
A recent metaanalysis published in the October 2006 issue of the British
Medical Journal found, “The small effect of calcium supplementation on bone
mineral density in the upper limb is unlikely to reduce the risk of fracture,
either in childhood or later life, to a degree of major public health
importance.”12 The authors state, “Our results do not support the premise
that any type of supplementation is more effective than another.” Their
findings mean dairy products are of no real-life bone-strengthening benefits.
Even studies that used intakes of 1400 mg per day of calcium showed no
benefit.
An editorial accompanying this metaanalysis pointed out, “Populations that
consume the most cow's milk and other dairy products have among the highest
rates of osteoporosis and hip fracture in later life.” 13 So does this mean
consuming dairy products will hurt your bones?

Dairy-Industry
Funded Research Shows Little Benefit for Adults
The National Dairy Council says, “Consuming
an adequate intake of calcium reduces the risk of osteoporosis.”2 But is
that true? A recent review published in the American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition of the research on the effects of dairy products on bone health
found 57 studies, and of these, 21 studies were considered to have
stronger-evidence, worthy of inclusion in this review.16 Of these better
studies, 57% showed no significant benefit from dairy, 29% were favorable, and
14% were unfavorable. Not mentioned is the fact that most of these 57 studies
were funded by the dairy industry, yet with all their influence on the
research, they could not make a solid case for dairy benefiting the
bones.
This review included seven randomized, controlled trials (a research design
scientists consider most valuable) - six of these were identified in the
papers as being funded by the dairy industry. Only one of these studies (which
was funded by the National Dairy Council) looked at the effects of fluid milk
on postmenopausal women.17 The findings showed subjects who received the extra
milk (three 8 ounce glasses of skimmed milk daily) for a year lost more bone
than those who didn’t drink the extra milk. The authors, Recker and Heaney,
wrote, “The protein content of the milk supplement may have a negative
effect on calcium balance, possibly through an increase in kidney losses of
calcium or through a direct effect on bone resorption…this may have been due
to the average 30 percent increase in protein intake during milk
supplementation.” Because of research like this, largely funded through
their own generosity, the people running the dairy industry know milk does not
build strong bones and that the protein in the milk actually damages the
bones.
They
Are Just Doing Their Job - Selling Cow’s Milk to People
The worldwide observation that billions of
people grow normal adult skeletons without consuming cow’s milk or calcium
supplements should be enough to reassure everyone of the adequacy of a
plant-food-based diet, and forever erase from people’s minds the question,
“where do you get your calcium on a vegan diet.” This would be the case
except for the billions of dollars that are at stake.
Even in the face of solid scientific evidence to the contrary, because in part
of the annual $206.5 million advertising campaign of the dairy industry,
mothers, doctors, and government officials have bought the dairy industry's
propaganda about calcium. Misleading marketing might be forgiven if the only
consequences were wasted money and efforts; but the costs deepen. The result
of selling dairy foods to correct a problem that does not exist - calcium
deficiency - Is that consumers buy foods that actually make them sick. Next
month’s newsletter will focus on the health consequences of believing the
big fat lies from the dairy industry.
This article has been reproduced from Dr McDougall's Health and Medical Centre website::
www.drmcdougall.com/misc/2007nl/feb/whenfriendsask.htm
References:
1) Dairy Industry Spends 206.5 million:
www.dairycheckoff.com/NR/rdonlyres/8556915B-BDF6-4CAA-8D41-48AF5C3FA0FF/0/2005dmiannualreport.pdf.
2) Dairy industry says, insufficient calcium leads to chronic disease:
www.nationaldairycouncil.org/NationalDairyCouncil/Health/Digest/dcd69-1Page1.htm
3) 593 pounds of dairy consumed anually:
www.dairycheckoff.com/NR/rdonlyres/3B1BFEB1-6DFF-471C-A492-42A7064F7B89/0/generalcheckofffactsheet.pdf
4) Sellers EA, Sharma A, Rodd C. Adaptation of Inuit children to a low-calcium
diet. CMAJ. 2003 Apr 29;168(9):1141-3. Plus: CMAJ. 2003 Sep 16;169(6):542;
author reply 542-3.
5) Paterson CR. Calcium requirements in man: a critical review. Postgrad Med
J. 1978 Apr;54(630):244-8.
6) Pettifor JM. Nutritional rickets: deficiency of vitamin D, calcium, or
both? Am J Clin Nutr. 2004 Dec;80(6 Suppl):1725S-9S.
7) Taylor A, Mandell G, Norman ME. Calcium deficiency rickets in a North
American child. Clin Pediatr (Phila). 1994 Aug;33(8):494-7.
8) Legius E, Proesmans W, Eggermont E, Vandamme-Lobaerts R, Bouillon R, Smet
M. Rickets due to dietary calcium deficiency. Eur J Pediatr 1989;148:784–5.
9) Pettifor JM, Ross P, Wang J, Moodley G, Couper-Smith J. Rickets in children
of rural origin in South Africa: is low dietary calcium a factor? J Pediatr
1978;92:320–4.
10) Belachew T, Nida H, Getaneh T, Woldemariam D, Getinet W. Calcium
deficiency and causation of rickets in Ethiopian children. East Afr Med J.
2005 Mar;82(3):153-9.
11) Lanou AJ, Berkow SE, Barnard ND. Calcium, dairy products, and bone health
in children and young adults: a reevaluation of the evidence. Pediatrics. 2005
Mar;115(3):736-43.
12) Winzenberg T, Shaw K, Fryer J, Jones G. Effects of calcium supplementation
on bone density in healthy children: meta-analysis of randomised controlled
trials. BMJ. 2006 Oct 14;333(7572):775.
13) Lanou AJ. Bone health in children. BMJ. 2006 Oct 14;333(7572):763-4.
14) Abelow B. Cross-cultural association between dietary animal protein and
hip fracture: a hypothesis. Calcific Tissue Int 50:14-8, 1992.
15) Frassetto LA . Worldwide incidence of hip fracture in elderly women:
relation to consumption of animal and vegetable foods. J Gerontol A Biol Sci
Med Sci. 2000 Oct;55(10):M585-92.
16) Weinsier RL, Krumdieck CL. Dairy foods and bone health: examination of the
evidence. Am J Clin Nutr. 2000 Sep;72(3):681-9.
17) Recker RR, Heaney RP. The effect of milk supplements on calcium
metabolism, bone metabolism and calcium balance. Am J Clin Nutr. 1985
Feb;41(2):254-63.
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