Science The Dairy Bar - Dairy owner caught making synthetic milk, unit sealed

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https://www.thelocal.se/20170215/to...ife-especially-if-youre-a-woman-swedish-study

People who drink too much milk are at a higher risk of an early death, and the risk is greater for women than men, the results of a new study in Sweden suggest.
The study, done by researchers at Uppsala University and Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, examined information provided by around 106,000 men and women in the country.

It showed that those who consume a large amount of milk run the risk of an earlier death than those who don't due to increased chronic low-grade inflammation in the body. And the new research is the first to suggest a difference in risk according to gender.

"In a previous study we observed that a high level of milk consumption is linked to an earlier death. However this new study shows that there is indeed a gender difference, which is something that hasn’t been shown before," Uppsala University's Karl Michaëlsson told The Local.

"My advice though is to see this study as a piece of a puzzle. We need more pieces of the puzzle before authorities can give definitive recommendations," he added.

The study, published in the American Journal of Epidemiology, followed up on previous research which suggests that milk drinkers are not better protected against bone fractures (for women, the opposite was actually observed).

The new research suggests that regular milk drinkers do however risk shortening their lives, with the risk at its highest among women who drink a lot of milk.

"That could be explained by the gender differences in how women and men break down galactose, a component of the milk sugar lactose. Among animals there are clear gender differences in this area," Michaëlsson noted.

For women who drink at least three glasses of milk and eat fruit and vegetables a maximum of one time per day, the risk of dying earlier is almost three times higher than for women who drink no more than one glass of milk per day and eat fruit and vegetables at least five times per day.

Women who drink three glasses of milk per day and eat fruit and vegetables at least five times per day still showed a 60 percent higher risk of earlier death than women who consumed the same amount of fruit and veg but drink little to no milk at all.

For men it is a different story however. The risk of early death is only 30 percent higher for men who drink at least three glasses of milk per day than it is for men who rarely or never drink milk. In contrast to women, the amount of fruit and vegetables they consume did not appear to significantly alter those outcomes.

Asked if the study shows that women in particular should moderate their milk consumption, researcher Michaëlsson took a cautious stance.

"The study is an observational study and it alone should not be used as a basis for recommendations. We need more pieces of the puzzle."
 
Swedish women? Filled with cum? Surely you don't say...

EDIT: Those blonde sluts are probably asking for it.
 
No some people are 'Passive Rape' intolerant damn #cisgenders!
 
So is milk like, haram or some shit?

That's right, bitches. You saw what I did there. Bow before your new GodBear
 
I'm partially convinced that milk isn't that great for anyone. Some ethnicities are lactose intolerant (hence the milk is racist thing). There's apparently some theory that part of the reason western civilization is so successful is due to being able to digest milk better than blacks/asians/etc, therefore having an extra source of calories other people didn't have, idk how much stock I put in that theory, but it's a thought.
I'm not sure if there is much in milk that isn't found in a better source elsewhere. Cultures that drink very little milk don't necessarily have all the bone issues you would think, they get calcium etc from fruit and vegetable sources which are surely healthier.
I've had trouble figuring out the truth re. milk because it all seems to be either pro-milk propaganda by dairy farmers or anti-milk propaganda by vegans and various diet shills. My take is basically that I like dairy but drinking three glasses a day is bullshit and a really great way to get fat if you're a woman.
 
Just going "Early death! Early death!" strikes me more like fear-mongering than a cohesive study

If you're not gonna elaborate on the reasons why milk and how the body breaks down galactose does that to you and instead act like you're going to get super-cancer because you drink too much milk, I don't see the point
 
If you're not gonna elaborate on the reasons why tard cum and how the body breaks down galactose does that to you and instead act like you're going to get super-cancer because you drink too much tard cum, I don't see the point
Maybe they just wanted an excuse to say galactose, because it's such a cool word

The actual study looks decent and they give some plausible explanations, the media as usual just takes the "cuddling kittens can kill you" headline and runs with it (that is an actual headline)
 
Maybe they just wanted an excuse to say galactose, because it's such a cool word

The actual study looks decent and they give some plausible explanations, the media as usual just takes the "cuddling kittens can kill you" headline and runs with it (that is an actual headline)

It's most likely the latter, as the article linked only briefly mentions a reason once (chronic low-grade inflammation) while going Early Death! in every other sentence
 
Just going "Early death! Early death!" strikes me more like fear-mongering than a cohesive study

If you're not gonna elaborate on the reasons why tard cum and how the body breaks down galactose does that to you and instead act like you're going to get super-cancer because you drink too much tard cum, I don't see the point

It is a cohort study, which is the best kind of study epidemiology can ask for (The famous study that conclusively linked smoking and lung cancer was of this sort). I think the disclaimer "The study is an observational study and it alone should not be used as a basis for recommendations" is overly modest. This said, there is no guarantee that the result can be generalized to other ethnic groups, or even white people outside Sweden.
 
considering cheese is made with milk and I consume it on a near daily basis I'm probably gonna die.
Then again I'm not lactose intolerant so that may give me a little more time to live.
At least it's not tard cum.
 
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/nat...k/news-story/7ea28381570426fe0c9b37de27a4b058

A milk moustache may soon be a sign that life has been saved.

Pharmaceutical companies working with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation have discovered a single dose cure for malaria that works when taken with milk.

The foundation has now given a substantial grant to a team of Australian scientists at the Australian Research Council’s Centre for Bio-Nano Sciences under Ben Boyd to determine what it is about milk that makes the drug work.

Professor Boyd’s research area is drug delivery and his team has now discovered why milk works and is tackling the problem of whether something similar to milk can be used.

He said the single-dose tablet has the chance to save half a million lives in Africa and Asia every year but they can’t produce a drug that works only when someone drinks milk, which might not be available.

“This is the only option at this stage that’s on the table to have that sort of an impact and that’s why the Gates Foundation is going so full on with this project,” Professor Boyd said. “They came to us with this problem because its squarely in our area.”

He said the majority of drugs that are discovered today don’t become medicines because they are unable to dissolve in normal stomach contents, but this breakthrough with milk could have the ability to assist these other drugs.

“It’s no coincidence because nature has designed, depending on your theological perspective, milk to deliver our essential nutrients, to help our brain and bodies develop as infants,” he said.

“We need to overcome that hurdle of understanding why milk works so well and what are our options for using milk or milk-like variants.”

He said a solution using the team’s findings could also be used to improve AIDS medication and the delivery of antiretroviral drugs, as well as getting medications to people in low economic or nomadic settings where it can be hard to have people come for a single dose.

Professor Boyd said the problem with milk was its variability.

“Season to season and even cow to cow, the components that are in milk change and although that may not make much of a difference to natural performance, it can be a no-go point for the regulatory authorities,” he said.

The Australian scientists have been awarded a one-year grant and Professor Boyd said he thought that the team was making more progress than what was anticipated.

The next set of clinical trials are set for May.
 
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