I'm interested in what effects you get with your supplementation, and will track this thread.
Goatmilk and goat colostrum is very different than human milk and human colostrum. There are many specialized antibodies in human colostrum, they give the baby a boost for three months or so till the baby's immune system starts growing. The human immune system is not fully developed till 6-7 years, when the molars are erupting as well, when archeological records and many areas of the world today wean, and the human child's size relative to its mother's and other animals indicates natural weaning around the same age.
Antibodies are picked up from the human baby's mother's milk over the years of breastfeeding. For an quick overview of the immunological benefits of breastmilk look at:
http://www.kellymom....unefactors.html (that will give you an idea also of why there is a 35% to 85% reduction, depending on which disease one is looking at, in breastfed babies vs. formula)
Breast milk changes antibodies depending on what the mother or baby is exposed to. I've seen studies showing that supplemental cow's colostrum, and raw cow milk with its anti-bodies intact, do not build a human child's immune system adequately yet and can not be replicated for use in human infant formula. I've not seen studies looking at goat colostrum, but I would suspect the same. I didn't see anything at the that Colostrom Institute website, on their long string of study references that would indicate otherwise. In fact I saw one study listed, concerning Bovine colustrum and premature infant,s that I'd seen referenced by breast-feeding activists showing that other species colostrum did not work as well as human. Some of the studies there were pertaining to the advantages of human colostrum for human babies.
In some parts of India even today it is common practice to acquire the colostrom from a new mother to heal very sick elderly. In America very wealthy families, who are educated about the scientific benefits of breast-milk, but can not themselves breast-fed due to their work schedule are hiring wet-nurses. I've heard of this before, and just saw an interesting article in Time today on it.
http://www.time.com/...ite-cnn-partner