Francis M. Pottenger, MD and
"The Hazards of a Health Fetish"
By Ron Schmid, ND
The impact of quoted work is often influenced by the reputation of the
person quoted. But what makes a reputation, in particular that of a person
who died many years ago? Certainly in part the accuracy and importance
of the written work left behind. But when a person's life and work are
ignored by most of society, much less maligned by prestigious segments,
reputation suffers. What yardstick may we use then to evaluate the import
of the life? We may be left with only our judgement of the work itself.
If the work is complex and perhaps not readily available, as is Dr. Pottenger's,
making that judgement may be difficult.
Thomas Hotchkiss knew Francis M. Pottenger from the time Thomas was
eleven years old in 1912. His "Personal Memoir" of Francis, written after
his death in 1967, provided me with the following details about Francis's
life.1
GENIUS AND SERVICE
Two years before his death, Pottenger received the Distinguished Alumnus
Award at Otterbein College in Ohio. In presenting the citation, the Chairman
of the Board of Trustees praised Pottenger's distinguished career in medicine
and public service.
Service indeed. By the time he received that award, Francis M. Pottenger,
MD, had published over fifty peer-reviewed articles in the scientific
literature, mainly in the fields of medicine, chronic disease and nutrition.
He had served as president of the Los Angeles County Medical Association,
the American Therapeutic Society and the American Academy of Applied Nutrition.
"Francis was among the first in his profession to recognize the hazard
to health caused by air pollution in Los Angeles County. He worked indefatigably
over a period of many years to mitigate its deleterious effects upon human
health. His efforts were widely recognized and as a result he became a
member of the Los Angeles County Air Pollution Control District's Scientific
Committee on Air Pollution."
Pottenger received a rather unusual accolade for a medical doctor. In
1951, the Texas State Dental Association honored him with an award for
the Advancement of the Science of Dentistry in Texas. He had written a
number of brilliant articles on the effect of raw versus cooked foods,
including pasteurized milk, on the dental and facial structures of animals
and human beings. The articles had a powerful and lasting impact on the
many American physicians and dentists who were actively interested in
the effect of nutrition on human health and disease.
In 1940, Francis founded the Francis M. Pottenger, Jr., Hospital at
Monrovia, California, for the treatment of asthma and other nontubercular
diseases of the respiratory system. And beginning in 1945, he was Assistant
Clinical Professor of Experimental Medicine at the University of Southern
California.
Dr. Pottenger also served as Medical Service Chief for the Civil Defense
Area surrounding his home during World War II. Japanese invasion of the
West Coast of America was considered a real threat in the dark days just
after the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor. The project to set up the first
portable hospital in Los Angeles County under simulated disaster conditions
was directed by Pottenger.
In 1940 he began what became known as the Pottenger Cat Study, the work
that brought him fame. There's no money these days in making famous a
man who proves the value of raw foods; in the last forty years or so,
Pottenger's fame in the conventional medical and nutritional establishment
has faded as surely as the stocks of processed food companies have risen.
Yet he remains an icon to those who understand his work and its importance,
particularly in relationship to the work of Weston Price. Let's look now
at what Francis had to say in one of his many professional papers, and
an example of how his work has not only been misunderstood and ignored,
but indeed sometimes deliberately misrepresented.
A FETISH
A fetish is defined as 1) a thing abnormally stimulating or attracting
sexual desire and 2) an inanimate object worshipped by primitive peoples
for its supposed inherent magical powers or as being inhabited by a spirit.
b. a thing evoking irrational devotion or respect.2
For many years, advocates for raw milk have pointed to Pottenger's work
as perhaps the most important research that proves raw milk's benefits.
Those who would outlaw the sale of all raw milk have meanwhile disparaged
and distorted his work. An example of the latter is found in an article
titled "Unpasteurized Milk-The Hazards of a Health Fetish" that appeared
in the Journal of the American Medical Association on October 19,
1984.3 The authors refer to a 1946 Pottenger article from the
American Journal of Orthodontics and Oral Surgery, "The Effect
of Heat-Processed and Metabolized Vitamin D Milk on the Dentofacial Structures
of Experimental Animals."4
The authors of the "Health Fetish" article state: "Numerous studies
of the relative nutritional merits of raw and pasteurized milk have been
conducted in animals and humans, and no differences were detectable. One
animal study deserves particular attention because a misrepresentation
of the results has become prominent in the raw milk folklore. In 1946,
Pottenger published a report about his observations on cats fed varying
combinations of raw and heat-treated milk and raw and cooked meat. In
his first and largest series of experiments, Pottenger observed many diseases
in cats fed raw milk and cooked meat. Raw milk advocates have erroneously
cited this article as having reported that disease occurred in cats fed
pasteurized milk. Smaller experiments in the same article showed
that a diet of one-third raw meat and two-thirds milk (pasteurized or
not) did not provide adequate nutrition for the cats."
Based on this quote, one might reasonably think that perhaps the diseases
Pottenger observed in the first series of experiments were caused by raw
milk, and that the smaller experiments showed that raw milk was not superior
nutritionally to pasteurized milk. Publication in so prestigious a journal
by two medical doctors and two veterinarians lends further weight to the
pronouncements.
THE CAT STUDY
Let us examine what Pottenger actually had to say in his article. "In
the first series of experiments, one group of cats was fed a diet of two-thirds
raw meat, one-third raw milk, and cod-liver oil. The second group was
fed a diet of two-thirds cooked meat, one-third raw milk, and cod-liver
oil. Within the ten-year period, approximately nine hundred cats were
studied. The amount of data accumulated is large.
"The cats receiving raw meat and raw milk reproduced in homogeneity
from one generation to the next. Abortion was uncommon and the mother
cats nursed their young in a normal manner. The cats had good resistance
to vermin, infections, and parasites. They behaved in a predictable manner.
Their organic development was complete and functioned normally.
"Cats receiving the cooked-meat scraps reproduced a heterogeneous strain
of kittens, each kitten of the litter being different in skeletal pattern.
Abortion in these cats was common, running about 25 per cent in the first
generation to about 70 per cent in the second generation. Deliveries were
in general difficult, many cats dying in labor. Mortality rates of the
kittens were high, frequently due to the failure of the mother to lactate.
The kittens were often too frail to nurse."
Based on this quote, one might reasonably conclude that the problems
observed were due to differences in the nutrition provided by raw versus
cooked meats. We see here how a true statement in the "Health Fetish"
article ("Pottenger observed many diseases in cats fed raw milk and cooked
meat") may be placed in a context designed to lead the reader into making
false conclusions.
The next half-truth is even more subtle: "Smaller experiments in the
same article showed that a diet of one-third raw meat and two-thirds milk
(pasteurized or not) did not provide adequate nutrition for the cats."
Further examination of Pottenger's article is required to understand the
subterfuge involved.
Again quoting Pottenger: "We did three other series of feeding experiments.
In these series we used the following kinds of milk: raw milk, raw metabolized
vitamin D milk, pasteurized milk, evaporated milk, and sweetened condensed
milk. Roughly, our results corresponded with those of the previous experiments;
animals on raw milk and raw meat reproduced a homogenous strain, the usual
causes of natural death being old age or injuries from fighting.
"The male cats fed on [raw] metabolized vitamin D milk (from cattle
fed irradiated yeast) and raw meat showed osseous disturbances very like
those on pasteurized milk. . . . Young males did not live beyond the second
month, and adult males died within ten months. . . . The cats fed pasteurized
milk as their principal item of diet, and raw meat as a partial diet,
showed lessened reproductive efficiency in the females, and some skeletal
changes, while the kittens presented deficiencies in development. . .
. Later, we made a comparative study of several types of milk on white
rats, the general results of which coincided with those found in the cats."
WORD GAMES
We see that Pottenger's own words describe clearly the superior value
of raw versus pasteurized milk for the animals. Yet the "Health Fetish"
authors statement that "a diet of one-third raw meat and two-thirds milk
(pasteurized or not) did not provide adequate nutrition for the cats"
is strictly speaking true, because of the use of the phrase "pasteurized
or not." One experiment used raw metabolized vitamin D milk, and, like
the pasteurized, evaporated, and sweetened condensed milks, this resulted
in diseased animals. The metabolized vitamin D (a synthetic form of the
vitamin present in the milk because the cows had been fed irradiated yeast)
proved to be so toxic that it overrode the benefits of the otherwise optimal
all-raw diet that were proven in the animals fed plain raw milk. Thus
one type of milk that was not pasteurized had indeed not provided
adequate nutrition. Had the "Health Fetish" authors used the phrase "pasteurized
or raw," the statement would have been false, because the word raw would
be referring to both raw milks testedthe raw metabolized
vitamin D milk that did not provide adequate nutrition, and the plain
raw milk that did. The choice of the word "not" makes the distortion possible
without actually making a false statement. Very clever indeed. There is
no discussion on the toxicity of the synthetic vitamin D in the "Health
Fetish" article, and no mention of the sparkling health seen in generation
after generation of cats fed raw meat and raw milk free of synthetic vitamin
D.
The "Health Fetish" authors make one other statement that may not be
called an untruth, yet is obviously designed to lead one to false conclusions:
"Raw milk advocates have erroneously cited this article as having reported
that disease occurred in cats fed pasteurized milk." I'll repeat
what Pottenger reported: "The cats fed pasteurized milk as their principal
item of diet, and raw meat as a partial diet, showed lessened reproductive
efficiency in the females, and some skeletal changes, while the kittens
presented deficiencies in development." Pottenger indeed does not actually
use the word "disease" here or anywhere else in this article in reference
to animals fed pasteurized milk (the article is about effects on the dental
and facial structures of the animals). Yet his finding of the superiority
of raw versus pasteurized milk is clearly presented. In fact, in one experiment
described briefly, 13 cats fed pasteurized milk all died within several
months.
The "Health Fetish" authors make no mention of a number of other relevant
findings published in the Pottenger article. For example, an autopsy photograph
shows the internal organs of a cat that had been fed a diet of one-third
raw meat and two-thirds pasteurized milk for eight months before being
sacrificed. The caption reads, "Note poor tone of skin and inferior quality
of fur. Fair heart. Slight fatty atrophy of the liver. Lack of intestinal
tone: moderated distension of uterus. Note the disturbance of the skin
with a shift from the creamy color of the raw-milk fed cat to the purplish
discoloration of congestion."
In contrast, another photograph shows the internal organs of a cat fed
a diet of one-third raw meat and two-thirds raw milk all of its life.
The caption reads, "Note excellent condition of fur and creamy yellow
subcutaneous tissue with high vascularity. Moderate heart size. Good liver,
firm intestines, and resting uterus. Note the muscle of the raw-milk-fed
animal has a deeper red color and appears more vascular than that of the
animals receiving the heat-processed milks."
Another experiment began with 13 cats in excellent health that had been
raised on raw meat and raw milk. A table is used to show how long these
cats lived after being placed on a diet of one-third raw meat and two-thirds
pasteurized milk. The average length of life for the males is 4 months
11 days, for the females 3 months 27 days. The calcium-to-phosphorous
ratio of each cat's femur (thighbone) is shown, and all are abnormal.
Two X-ray photographs depict the results of another experiment that
used two rats, one fed raw milk (rat A) and the other pasteurized (rat
B). The caption for the raw milk animal reads, "Note advanced maturity,
greater diameter and length of the olecranon process [part of the elbow]
of the ulna [the long bone in the foreleg]." The caption for the pasteurized
milk animal reads, "Note smaller olecranon process and delayed maturity
when compared with rat A."
Another photograph shows a number of bones from one of the cats, previously
healthy, that died four months after being placed on the one-third raw
meat and two-thirds pasteurized milk diet. The caption reads, "Note missing
teeth, chalky appearance of bone, squaring of the bases of teeth and marked
root resorption. Osteoporosis. Lack of completion of orbital arches [the
orbit is the eye socket]. Malar bones [the cheek bones] have become separated
at suture lines [where the bones come together]."
An X-ray of the jaw of a living cat fed the raw meat-raw milk diet all
of its life is presented. The caption reads, "Normal jaw structure, good
distribution of trabeculae [part of the bony structure], well developed
condyle [a knob at the end of the bone], and well developed pterygoid
process [a little outgrowth of bone] of the mandible [jaw bone]. Alveolar
crest [the alveolus is the bony socket for the root of a tooth] of normal
height; even distribution of teeth."
TRUE BUT MISLEADING
My object here is not to give a lesson in anatomy, but rather to make
accessible to the reader some of the details of Pottenger's findings.
In this article he focused primarily on the effects of heat-processed
foods, including pasteurized milk, on the bones and jaws of his experimental
animals because the article was written for a dental journal. In many
other articles published over the course of some fifteen years, he emphasizes
the diseases that result in cats and other animals when fed diets that
include pasteurized milk.
Another of the "Health Fetish" authors' statements quoted earlier deserves
further inquiry: "Numerous studies of the relative nutritional merits
of raw and pasteurized milk have been conducted in animals and humans,
and no differences were detectable." This appears to be a simple statement
of fact. Since, in reality, numerous studies of the relative nutritional
merits of raw and pasteurized milk conducted on animals and humans have
shown clearly the nutritional superiority of raw milk, one is tempted
to declare the "Health Fetish" statement to be untrue. But in fact it
is a true statement! Now how can that be? To answer this question, we
must do a little exercise in logic.
Examine these two statements: 1) "Numerous studies of the relative nutritional
merits of raw and pasteurized milk have been conducted in animals and
humans, and no differences were detectable." 2) "Numerous studies
of the relative nutritional merits of raw and pasteurized milk have been
conducted in animals and humans, and vast differences were detectable."
It appears that if one statement is true, the other must be false, right?
Wrong! Both statements may be trueit all depends on which
"numerous studies" the writer is referring to, and when he doesn't tell
us, he isn't pinned down. Even if the writer is aware of numerous studies
that favor both sides of the argument, statements 1 and 2 may both be
defended as true statements (in a court of law, for example, or in a subsequent
article). Understanding this element of logic is necessary when writers
employ logical tricks. Young people who go on to medical school usually
study logic as undergraduates.
Notice that although the authors refer to Pottenger's animal study in
the very next sentence, they carefully do not say it is one of the "numerous
studies" to which they have just referred. We get the impression that
it is, of course. But they do not say this, for to do so would be false;
as we have seen, Pottenger's study undeniably shows the nutritional superiority
of raw milk as compared to pasteurized.
But it is almost as though someone played a game of perverse (dare I
say fetishistic) logic, devising technically true statements which would
disguise Pottenger's findings, distort the meaning of his words and trick
the reader into false conclusions. I've studied Pottenger's work for over
twenty years, and it took me hours to untangle the web I've described.
It is indeed a fact that a number of researchers supported by grants
from the dairy industry have published research that claimed to find no
significant differences in the relative nutritional merits of raw and
pasteurized milk. We have good reason to question the validity of research
funded by corporate money or conducted by individuals funded by corporations.
No references are given for the "numerous studies" mentioned above, so
it is not possible to examine them.
The "Health Fetish" authors carefully avoided any simple, straightforward
statement to the effect of, "None of the reasonable studies in animals
or humans of which we are aware have shown that there is a significant
difference in the relative nutritional merits of raw and pasteurized milk."
They also avoided words to the effect of "The Pottenger study under discussion
showed no significant difference in the relative nutritional merits of
raw and pasteurized milk." Either statement would have been patently false,
because scores of reasonable studies, obviously including this Pottenger
study, demonstrate the nutritional superiority of raw versus pasteurized
milk.
We've seen that the "Health Fetish" authors used technically (logically)
true statements to completely distort Dr. Pottenger's findings. Only careful
study of Pottenger's article would allow the choice of precisely the right
words to accomplish this while avoiding making false statements. We may
hope that the authors gained considerable understanding of Pottenger's
work and its implications for the health of people everywhere. Perhaps
they may someday use that knowledge in the way Dr. Pottenger intended.
RAW MILK IS BEST
Pottenger concludes his article with possible explanations for his findings,
referencing his words to physiology textbooks and articles by other scientists:
"What vital elements were destroyed in the heat processing of the foods
fed the cats? The precise factors are not known. Ordinary cooking precipitates
proteins, rendering them less easily digested. All tissue enzymes are
heat labile and would be materially reduced or destroyed. Vitamin C and
some members of the B complex are injured by the process of cooking. Minerals
are rendered less soluble by altering their physiochemical state. It is
possible that the alteration of the physicochemical state of the foods
may be all that is necessary to render them imperfect foods for the maintenance
of health. It is our impression that the denaturing of proteins by
heat is one factor responsible. The principles of growth and development
are easily altered by heat and oxidation, which kill living cells at every
stage of the life process, from the soil through the plant, and through
the animal."
Dr. Pottenger's work leaves us with clear indications that there is
no better food for human beings than raw milk from grass-fed animals.
The clear and present danger is that "experts" such as the health fetish
article authors wield unjustified influence with physicians and public
health authoritiesinfluence based in large part on false representations.
Understanding the truth about Pottenger's work and the value of raw milk
is an important step in regaining our health.
©2002 Ron Schmid
REFERENCES
1. Hotchkiss, Thomas. A Personal Memoir of Francis M. Pottenger, Jr.,
M.D. The Price-Pottenger Nutrition Foundation, 1975.
2. The Oxford Encyclopedic Dictionary, Oxford, 1991.
3. Potter, M., Kaufmann, A., Blake, P., and Feldman, R. "Unpasteurized
Milk - The Hazards of a Health Fetish." The Journal of the American
Medical Association, Vol. 252, No. 15, 2048-2052, October 19, 1984.
4. Pottenger, F.M., Jr. "The Effect of Heat-Processed and Metabolized
Vitamin D Milk on the Dentofacial Structures of Experimental Animals."
American Journal of Orthodontics and Oral Surgery, Vol. 32, No.
8, 467-485, August, 1946.
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