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Yoplait
Mon Feb 16, 2009 at 08:35:40 AM PST
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Last week Yoplait announced its decision to go rbGH-free. This week, the papers are full of articles proclaiming the news. Here's what the cat Google alert dragged in this morning:
Consumer Demand, Not Safety, Led General Mills to Ditch rbGH - This article does not make the claim that rbGH is actually safe - it just says that General Mills did not take sides on the safety of the product. Its decision was based on marketing.
The article's author has her own opinion:
Are artificial hormones actually unsafe? I won't pretend to be qualified to answer that question. There are studies and scientists supporting both sides of the issue (though when it comes to possible but unproven cancer links, my personal instinct is to err on the side of caution).
However, regardless of whether or not the artificial hormones are potentially risky for humans, there is a general agreement that they're bad for cows. Cows taking the hormones get more udder infections - and when cows get sick, farmers give them antibiotics, "the residues of which also may end up in milk and dairy products," as the Center for Food Safety explains.
These residues can cause allergic reactions in sensitive individuals and contribute to the growth of antibiotic resistant bacteria, further undermining the efficacy of some antibiotics in fighting human infections.
To me, the whole thing sounds like a pretty bad idea. But it also seems pretty unlikely that the FDA will change its rules on rBGH any time soon. Instead, I predict we'll see more even more companies deciding, like GM, to cater to the common consumer perception that injecting cows with artificial hormones is, at the very least, kind of creepy.
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Mon Feb 09, 2009 at 10:26:21 AM PST
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I was keeping quiet to wait until Yoplait put out a statement, but I guess the, uh, yogurt is out of the bag. Yoplait has committed to going rbGH-free by August of this year. That is BIG news because a number of organizations have been working on Yoplait for a while, trying to get them to reject rbGH and hypocrisy.
You see, rbGH increases a hormone called IGF-1 (a hormone linked to breast cancer in humans) in cows and in their milk. Yet Yoplait runs a major publicity campaign asking consumers to send in their pink Yoplait lids to increase Yoplait's donation to fight breast cancer. Congratulations Yoplait, you are now walking your talk - or at least, you will by this August.
Latecomer or not to the rbGH-free world, Yoplait wasted no time patting themselves on the back in typical corporate fashion:
In an e-mail announcement sent out Friday, Yoplait noted that it's the first leading yogurt brand to go "rbGH-free," which may come as a surprise to companies such as Stonyfield, Nancy's, Cascade Fresh, Brown Cow, and other organic industry leaders, all of which have been in the forefront of the movement to reject the synthetic hormone in milk products.
Nice job, Yoplait. Dannon, you listening?
UPDATE: Yoplait's press release is out! See it below.
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Thu Nov 06, 2008 at 06:00:00 AM PST
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From the human health standpoint, IGF-1,a substance produced in our bodies by rBGH, may increase the risk of cancers of the breast, prostate, colon, lung and bone, according to Michael Hansen, senior scientist at Consumers Union, publisher of Consumer Reports. From the animal welfare point of view, rBGH is terribly inhumane, causing swollen, painful udders and frequent infections, which, of course, mean more antibiotic treatment (and residues in dairy products). - Plenty Magazine
Does that sound like something we want to serve children in public schools? I say no. Calcium is great, but why subject children to future risk of cancers unnecessarily. So many large dairies are already rBGH-free that it should not be logistically complicated to keep milk from cows treated with rBGH out of schools. Please, email or snail mail your Representative and your Senators asking them to add a provision to the upcoming Child Nutrition Reauthorization to get the rBGH out of our schools.
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Mon Oct 06, 2008 at 23:36:51 PM PDT
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If you're a regular reader on this site, you've seen a few posts about Yoplait yogurt. General Mills, who makes Yoplait, apparently thinks it's OK to give a token amount in donations to breast cancer even if their product might cause breast cancer to begin with. From the Minneapolis Star Tribune:
On her group's website, breastcanceraction.org, activist Brenner charges General Mills with "pinkwashing," or using a product that she says may be dangerous to women's health. Yoplait is made with dairy products from cows treated with bovine growth hormone (rBGH), which has been linked to several health concerns for humans, including breast cancer. Wal-Mart has stopped selling milk from rBGH-treated cows -- but not Yoplait yogurt. General Mills spokesman Tom Forsythe said that it's not possible to test for rBGH.
"The economic incentive for farmers to go rBGH-free is increasing, because cows don't last as long," Forsythe said. "Do we want to buy this? No. Is it a headache? Yes. But if there was a safety issue, the scientists would say so."
What a load of bull from General Mills. So many other major corporations have gone rBGH-free that it can't be that hard to do. And there's obviously a huge demand for it as well. Good to see this getting some play in the media, although the article seemed to accept the corporate spin from General Mills a little too readily for my taste.
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Thu Oct 02, 2008 at 15:19:42 PM PDT
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( - promoted by Jill Richardson)
Breast Cancer Awareness Month is here. You can probably tell by all of the pink ribbon products you're starting to see as October draws near. Lipstick, blenders, candy, cars - even toilet paper is being sold in the name of breast cancer awareness.
One pinked-out product you've probably noticed is Yoplait yogurt. Yoplait makes a 10-cent donation to a breast cancer organization for every pink lid consumers mail back to the company. Let's put that in real terms: If you ate three yogurts a day for the four-month duration of the campaign (and sent in all your lids), your donation would equal $36. That's a lot of yogurt - and not all that much money.
But what's more troubling is what's underneath the lid - the yogurt itself might not be that good for your health.
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Thu Sep 25, 2008 at 08:00:00 AM PDT
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Wal-Mart, Kraft, Starbucks, and Kroger have all made moves away from rBGH. But Yoplait? Nope. And that is all freshly relevant as we enter October - Breast Cancer Awareness Month - because rBGH boosts levels of a hormone (IGF-1) that is linked to breast cancer in humans.
So what's Yoplait doing for breast cancer this October? Getting rid of rBGH? Not a chance. They are putting pink lids on their containers and making $.10 donations for breast cancer for each one sent in.
To give 'em a piece of your mind, check out the Think Before You Pink Yoplait Campaign
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