
There’s a pretty common knowledge base in terms of drinking milk (or taking in calcium in some other way, shape, or form) leading to stronger, healthier bones. After all, who wants to develop osteoporosis, to have an increased risk of breaking a hip or something in a fall, of being deficient in vitamins or minerals that are fairly easy to get, nutritionally speaking?
And, like most healthy dietary habits, incorporating necessary nutrients into what you eat is easiest done when started at a young age.
After all, isn’t that why the standard beverage …