Babies shouldn't drink
unscreened donor breast milk, doctors warn
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[December 21, 2016]
By Lisa Rapaport
Donor breast milk that's screened,
pasteurized and distributed through milk banks can protect preemies
against serious illness, but donated milk bought online or obtained from
friends can actually make babies sick, say U.S. pediatricians.
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In its first policy statement on donor human milk, the American
Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) advises against using internet-based or
informal human milk sharing. These sources of human milk carry the
risk of bacterial or viral contamination, or exposure to
medications, drugs, herbs or other substances.
Most donor milk is distributed by milk banks through hospital
neonatal intensive care units, and is typically reserved for
preemies and other vulnerable infants. With limited supplies, some
parents are obtaining donor human milk directly from other parents
or from internet sources that may be less safe since they vary
widely in screening of donors and methods of milk storage and
transportation.
"We do not recommend direct milk sharing even if they have used home
methods to try to pasteurize it," said Dr. Steven Abrams of Dell
Medical School at the University of Texas at Austin, the lead author
of the policy statement.
"Milk banks are tightly regulated and use one of several
well-established and proven methods of pasteurization to remove
virtually all risks of transmitting infections," Abrams added by
email.
Human milk offers advantages for all newborns, but particularly for
infants weighing less than 1,500 grams (about 3.5 pounds), according
to the AAP. Studies show infants fed human milk have lower rates of
what's known as necrotizing enterocolitis, a life-threatening
intestinal disorder that primarily affects premature babies, as well
as a lower risk of lung and eye diseases.
Mother’s own milk is always preferred, in part because some of
breastmilk’s beneficial biological components may be reduced after
pasteurization.
But donor human milk can be an effective alternative when maternal
milk isn’t available or falls short of the infant’s needs, according
to the AAP. Reliably safe supplies of donor human milk from
established milk banks are still limited, however.
Women who can't afford or access milk bank donations would be better
off seeking help from friends than from the internet, said JoAnne
Flagg, a researcher at the Johns Hopkins University School of
Nursing in Baltimore, who wasn't involved in the policy statement.
It's possible to pasteurize donor milk at home using what's known as
the Holder pasteurization method, which heats milk to 145 degrees
for a half hour then gradually cools it, or by flash heating, Flagg
said by email.
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"Infant formula provides the nutrients the infant requires, but has
no additional health benefits," Flagg said. "Donor milk a mother
obtains from friends that is pasteurized by the above methods would
be superior to infant formula."
But she cautioned that donor milk from the internet or that isn't
pasteurized could not only expose babies to bacteria or viral
contaminants, it might not even contain breast milk.
Because improperly unpasteurized milk can transmit infections, many
clinicians consider home pasteurization unsafe and discourage it
even when women get milk from people they know, said Dr. Valerie
Flaherman, nursery director at the University of California, San
Francisco Medical Center.
"Mother's breast milk provides the best and safest nutrition for
babies," Flaherman, who wasn't involved in the policy statement,
said by email.
"Buying milk from the internet and feeding it to babies is hazardous
and risks giving the infant an infection, either an infection
directly transmitted from an infected donor or an infection that
occurs because milk storage conditions were poor," Flaherman added.
"Formula is prepared and stored according to FDA guidelines and is a
much safer choice than casually shared breast milk."
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