Medicinal Potential of Milk: A Meta-Analysis of Bioactive Compounds, Health Benefits, Consumption Patterns, and Policy Implications for Tanzania and Beyond
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Background
Milk from various animal species is increasingly recognized not only as a nutritional food but also as a functional therapeutic resource due to its rich bioactive compounds. However, disparities exist globally regarding awareness, consumption patterns, and industrial utilization of medicinal milk, particularly in Tanzania and Sub-Saharan Africa.
Objective
This meta-analysis synthesizes current literature on the medicinal potential of milk, focusing on the types of bioactive compounds, their therapeutic applications, consumption trends, regional awareness, and policy strategies that offer practical lessons for Tanzania.
Methods
A systematic search was conducted across the PubMed, Scopus, Google Scholar, and ScienceDirect databases, targeting studies published between 2010 and 2024. Data on bioactive compounds, therapeutic efficacy, consumption prevalence, and regional practices were extracted and synthesized. A comparative analysis was performed for Tanzania, East Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa, and global regions.
Results
Lactoferrin, immunoglobulins, insulin-like proteins, bioactive peptides, and probiotics are the most studied compounds in cow, goat, camel, sheep, and buffalo milk. Camel milk has demonstrated significant glycemic control effects, with fasting blood glucose reduction ranging from 9% to 18% in diabetic patients. Awareness of milk’s medicinal potential remains low in Tanzania (∼10%) compared to Kenya (30%), Ethiopia (40%), and Europe (>70%). The industrial extraction of bioactive (e.g., lactoferrin) is limited in Sub-Saharan Africa but well-established in Europe, Asia, and Oceania.
Conclusion
Tanzania presents significant untapped potential for integrating medicinal milk into its public health and dairy development strategies. Urgent multi-sectoral efforts focusing on awareness campaigns, research investment, dairy innovation, and policy reforms are essential.