Online human breast milk craze has
serious health risks: experts
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[June 18, 2015]
LONDON (Reuters) - A growing online
craze among some fitness communities, fetishists and chronic disease
sufferers for buying and drinking human breast milk poses serious health
risks, British experts said on Thursday.
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Writing in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine,
specialists said there was little evidence to support claims that
the milk - traded via websites in a lucrative market for adult
buyers - is some kind of super food that can boost health and
fitness and ward off disease.
Claims that it even helps with erectile dysfunction and cancer have
no clinical basis, they said. On the contrary, the experts warned,
raw and unpasteurized human breast milk bought online can expose
consumers to many serious infectious diseases, including hepatitis,
HIV and syphilis.
It is also potentially very hazardous if used to replace a healthy
balanced diet, Sarah Steele, a specialist at the global health and
policy unit at Queen Mary University of London, wrote in the
journal.
Nutritionally, she said, there is less protein in human breast milk
than other milks like cow's milk.
"Potential buyers should be made aware that no scientific study
evidences that direct adult consumption of human milk for medicinal
properties offers anything more than a placebo effect," Steele said.
She added that failure of women to sanitize properly when producing
milk, failure to sterilize equipment properly, and improper or
prolonged storage and transportation of milk can also expose
consumers to bacterial food-borne illnesses.
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"While many online mums claim they have been tested for viruses
during pregnancy, many do not realize that (such)screening needs to
be undertaken regularly," Steele said.
"Sexual and other activities ... may expose the women to viruses
that they may unwittingly pass on to consumers."
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Tom Brown)
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