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White Poison? The Social Consequences of Milk Consumption, 1850–1930
P.J. ATKINS, Department of Geography, University of Durham
SUMMARY This paper seeks to adduce evidence on the social consequences of milk
consumption in the period 1850–1930. It is shown that the poor quality of supply
partly resulted from the nature of the marketing system, with adulteration and
the use of chemical preservatives as other factors.
Local authority regulation and central government legislation were very slow in
controlling the cleanliness of production and sale. Milk was heavily
contaminated
with bacteria and was responsible for spreading a variety of diseases such as
scarlet fever and tuberculosis. Infants not wholly breastfed were
particularly vulnerable to diarrhoeal infections. Improvements such as
pasteurization and bottling were slow to spread and are unlikely to have had
much impact before the 1920s.
Overall it is argued that ill-health caused by dirty milk was more serious, and
its amelioration much later than previously documented.
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