She Drank Raw Milk, Saw Her Whole Life 'Blown Apart'

As demand grows, health experts warn that unpasteurized dairy can host dangerous germs
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted May 3, 2026 3:05 PM CDT
As Demand for Raw Milk Grows, Health Experts Balk
A cow's udder is sanitized before milking at Ronnybrook Farm, which uses pasteurization, in Ancramdale, New York, on April 22.   (AP photo/Mary Conlon)

Backers of raw milk are pushing to make the potentially dangerous product more widely available and easier to obtain, even as a new disease outbreak—one of at least five in the past year—sickens US children. More than three dozen bills supporting raw milk have been introduced in statehouses across the nation, per the AP, and a growing number of states are making it legal to sell. Dairy farmers, meanwhile, say they can barely keep it in stock. Top government officials and internet influencers are helping drive this momentum: Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. downed shots of raw milk at the White House a year ago and previously promised to halt "aggressive suppression" of the product.

Meanwhile, social media posts about raw milk have surged in recent months, often touting unproven claims about its health benefits. All of this alarms public health officials, who've long warned that unpasteurized milk can harbor risky germs. The current outbreak—tied to raw-milk cheddar cheese from California-based Raw Farm—has sickened nine people with E. coli, half of them children younger than 5. Some key takeaways:

  • State legislation: Bills favoring raw milk have been introduced in the current legislative session in 18 states, including those controlled by Democrats and Republicans. More than 40 bills introduced as of late April would make it easier to buy, sell, or consume raw milk. Some would allow it to be sold for human consumption, something more than three dozen states have already done; others seek to manage, guide, or expand already legal sales.
  • National legislation: That's also being considered. A bipartisan bill in the House would prevent federal departments, agencies, or courts from restricting the movement of raw milk between two states where its sale is legal. Wider access will probably mean more outbreaks, said Rutgers University food science professor Donald Schaffner.
  • Risks: Scientists and public health experts warn against drinking it. Websites run by the FDA and the CDC point to the well-documented risks of serious illness from a host of germs, including campylobacter, listeria, salmonella, and E. coli.
  • Stats: A CDC review counted more than 200 outbreaks tied to raw milk that sickened more than 2,600 people and sent 225 to hospitals between 1998 and 2018. Another analysis found that raw dairy products cause 840 times more illness and 45 times more hospitalizations than their pasteurized counterparts.
  • Who's affected: Children are especially vulnerable to such illness, as their immune systems are immature and because they drink milk frequently, noted Alex O'Brien of the Center for Dairy Research. But adults can also get very sick. Mari Tardiff of Ashland, Oregon, was hospitalized for five months after drinking raw milk contaminated with campylobacter in 2008. Doctors diagnosed her with Guillain-Barre syndrome, caused by her campylobacter infection. She spent time on a ventilator and was temporarily paralyzed and unable to talk. "Your whole life is completely blown apart," said Tardiff, now 70.
  • Availability: Proponents of raw milk are gratified that it's becoming more accessible. Even in states where it can't be sold in stores for human consumption, people can get raw milk marketed for pets or join a "herd share" in which consumers buy a partial ownership in a dairy herd.
  • Farmers: Those who sell it say safety is key. "My family and my wife, who's currently pregnant, drink about a gallon of our own raw milk every single day," said Ben Beichler, of Creambrook Farm in Middlebrook, Virginia, which relies on herd shares. "So if there's anybody who has a vested interest in making sure our milk is safe, it is us." Beichler said his 150-cow farm works with a veterinarian on regular herd checks and has a multistep safety process that includes sending milk to food safety labs every week to test for common germs.
  • Guidelines: With raw milk gaining a foothold, people on all sides of the issue are now favoring regulation. "It's kind of like legalization of weed, right?" said Schaffner. "If people want it, we should find a way to regulate it and do it safely."

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