Brutkey

The Sleight Doctor πŸƒπŸƒπŸ‰πŸ‰
@ApostateEnglishman@mastodon.world

@MostlyTato@mstdn.social @broadwaybabyto@zeroes.ca Raw milk enthusiasts point out that people having been drinking raw milk safely for millennia. Except those people had been drinking the same milk from the same cows since they were kids. They owned their own cows, kept them in sanitary conditions and they were free to graze on grass, their natural diet.

Even then it wasn't as safe as pasteurized or filtered milk, and zoonotic diseases such as cowpox were common.


MostlyTato
@MostlyTato@mstdn.social

@ApostateEnglishman@mastodon.world @broadwaybabyto@zeroes.ca
Well, yes, people had been dying of smallpox for centuries too. Until they didn't anymore.

The Sleight Doctor πŸƒπŸƒπŸ‰πŸ‰
@ApostateEnglishman@mastodon.world

@MostlyTato@mstdn.social @broadwaybabyto@zeroes.ca If I remember rightly, cowpox, which is unpleasant but rarely fatal, confers immunity to smallpox, which often is. Which may be one reason (aside from pasteurization not having been invented yet) that folks were prepared to accept the risks posed by raw milk!

But I'm only speculating.

Adam Jacobs πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦
@statsguy@mas.to

@ApostateEnglishman@mastodon.world @MostlyTato@mstdn.social @broadwaybabyto@zeroes.ca You remember rightly. Cowpox does indeed confer immunity to smallpox. In fact Jenner's smallpox vaccine in the 18th century was based on cowpox.

And that's why we call it a vaccine: from the Latin vacca, meaning cow.

Whether that has anything to do with drinking raw milk in times gone by I have no idea.

The Sleight Doctor πŸƒπŸƒπŸ‰πŸ‰
@ApostateEnglishman@mastodon.world

@statsguy@mas.to @MostlyTato@mstdn.social @broadwaybabyto@zeroes.ca Thanks!