A new survey has found that 1 in 6 Australians are avoiding milk and dairy products in their diet – and a worrying percentage may be doing it for the wrong reasons.
We call it ‘dietary self-avoidance’, but ‘Dr Google’ may be a more fitting term. We are of course referring to the habit of people excluding food groups from their diet in response to perceived symptoms without first seeking advice from a medical professional.
We’ve seen similar habits from Australians with other food groups – you might remember our findings about wheat avoidance. But these latest survey results are of particular concern given the potential health impacts, particularly for women.
Dairy foods are rich in a range of nutrients and important for all of us, but lifetime intake of dairy food is especially important for women owing to their higher rate of osteoporosis later in life.
However, the study of 1184 Australian adults (undertaken with the University of Adelaide) has found that 1 in 6 are choosing to avoid milk and dairy foods. And around three quarters of them are doing so without medical evidence.
The survey found that the vast majority – 74% – of dairy avoiders are making this choice to relieve adverse gastrointestinal symptoms such as cramps, bloating or wind. Far fewer participants cited not liking the taste or because they thought it’s fattening.
But most worrying was the revelation that women are more likely to avoid milk and other dairy foods than men. More than three quarters of osteoporosis sufferers are women, and removing dairy foods – which have a high level of calcium, which is essential for bone growth and strength – puts them further at risk.
But most worrying was the revelation that women are more likely to avoid milk and other dairy foods than men. More than three quarters of osteoporosis sufferers are women, and removing dairy foods – which have a high level of calcium, which is essential for bone growth and strength – puts them further at risk.
In fact, Osteoporosis Australia recommend 3 serves of dairy food per day in a normal adult diet eg: glass of milk (250 ml), tub of yoghurt (200 g), or a slice of cheese (40 g).
We also found that younger adults and people who tend to worry about illness or becoming ill were also more likely to restrict this food group.
An important finding is that only approximately a quarter of the symptomatic avoiders reported having a formal diagnosis that required them to avoid dairy. Some of these formal diagnoses included lactose intolerance, high cholesterol, asthma, allergy and diabetes. It is interesting that the decision to avoid some or all dairy foods was found to rely substantially on information or advice sourced from outside mainstream medical practice such as the internet, friends or alternative practitioners, rather than consulting a doctor for a medically-based diagnosis.
About three quarters of the people who reported avoiding dairy foods due to specific symptoms did not avoid all dairy foods – most commonly avoided foods for people who only avoided some dairy foods were milk, cheese and cream.
These results follow the team’s similar findings on wheat avoidance, which showed around ten times more Australians than those diagnosed with coeliac disease are avoiding wheat-based foods. This study reveals that even more people are avoiding dairy products and, in fact, that around one third of the respondents avoiding dairy foods are also avoiding wheat-based foods.
The self-prescribed nature of dairy (and wheat) avoidance presents us with questions regarding the accuracy of self-diagnosis and the potential for misattribution of symptoms. Most significantly, the findings are further evidence of a widespread tendency of people to seek and exercise control over their health by eliminating dietary factors without medical evidence or oversight.
The self-prescribed nature of dairy (and wheat) avoidance presents us with questions regarding the accuracy of self-diagnosis and the potential for misattribution of symptoms. Most significantly, the findings are further evidence of a widespread tendency of people to seek and exercise control over their health by eliminating dietary factors without medical evidence or oversight. However, regardless of whether or not individuals are correct in identifying dairy products as the cause of their symptoms, we face the prospect of a health-motivated reduction in dairy consumption.
Without replacement with other foods that are appropriately nutritious, the risk increases for reduced consumption of essential nutrients, including calcium, protein, iodine, vitamin A, riboflavin, vitamin B12 and zinc. Avoiding dairy (and wheat) to alleviate symptoms should be weighed against the consequences of healthy levels of consumption of important food groups. Given the apparent scale of the avoidance behaviour, these consequences can be significant for society in the long term.
To find out more about the survey, visit our website.
Updated 2/06/2016 –
This survey has been co-funded by CSIRO and The Grains Research and Development Corporation. The Grains Research and Development Corporation had no involvement in the study, data collection, or publication.
The Australian Dietary Guidelines is the ultimate guide of what we should be eating, and they state that so long as we are all eating either enough dairy foods or dairy alternatives, our calcium intake should be sufficient.
Canned fish including salmon and sardines have bones that are rich in calcium, and some vegetables like broccoli, bok choy, and silverbeet have calcium in them. Tofu and soy products with added calcium are also good sources: https://www.eatforhealth.gov.au/…/milk-yoghurt-cheese…
2nd June 2016 at 5:24 am
We have no need for milk beyond infancy. Why would we need the milk of another species as adults? Many health professionals get little to no training on nutrition. What they do get is generally from biased sources of information that promote unhealthy habits such as eating meat, dairy and eggs, calorie restriction and encourage drugs instead of looking at lifestyle factors to fix the source of the problem. Sorry, you won’t convince this nurse to drink milk!
1st June 2016 at 11:55 pm
Three members of the family I domesticated into get well-verified Vomiting & Diarrhoea whenever they eat unmodified milk products but not is the foods have been prepared using Lactose-free milk products. Their GP regards this as practical proof. Until Lactase-treated Milk brecame easy to get, they kept the Soy milk industry solvent. Soy milk is a reasonable-looking source of calcium, because the precipitant used to prepare Soy Milk and Tofu is a calcium salt.
1st June 2016 at 11:28 pm
I would like to know what the evidence base is behind recommending 3 servings of dairy for prevention of osteoporosis since the evidence doesn’t support this recommendation. Vitamin K helps prevent osteoporosis but barely anyone talks about it, maybe because it’s largely found in green leafy vegetables and that doesn’t sell well? I refer to two systematic reviews published in the BMJ showing no benefit to risk of fractures or clinically meaningful changes in BMD. http://www.bmj.com/content/351/bmj.h4580?ijkey=e65c702167305873fc8dddf23187382ff33d7646&keytype2=tf_ipsecsha and http://www.bmj.com/content/351/bmj.h4183
1st June 2016 at 10:32 pm
Medical advice is expensive these days
1st June 2016 at 10:01 pm
I was having GI problems for years! I was tested for Celiac. Nope! Gluten intolerance. Nope. IBD, IBS, Fibromyalgia etc. Nope, nope, nope and nope! So I started doing an elimination diet, (self diagnoses), and found I was stable if I didn’t consume cheese, cream, milk etc. So from that “self diagnosed”, (because I had already spent enough money from the advise from doctors who couldn’t find the issue, but made them richer all the same!), I did some digging And found there was a test I could do that would prove I had an issue with lactose. With approval from my GP I performed a hydrogen breath test, which goes to pathology to analyse, and sure enough, I was “officially” lactose intolerant.
I know, I know! I am an exception, but I guess why I’m writing this not in argument, but to aim it at those that “claim” to be lactose intolerant by self diagnoses. Until you take control, do your research, and then PROVE your claim, you are only assuming your issue is with lactose and/or dairy.
I hope someone finds this personal experience useful. ?
P.S. I miss cheese and pizza! ???????