Human breast milk is sold for babies on several online sites
for a few dollars an ounce, but a new study says buyer beware: Testing showed
it can contain potentially dangerous bacteria including salmonella.
The warning comes from researchers who bought and tested 101
breast milk samples sold by women on one popular site. Three-fourths of the
samples contained high amounts of bacteria that could potentially sicken
babies, the researchers found. They did not identify the website.
The results are "pretty scary," said Dr. Kenneth
Boyer, pediatrics chief at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, who was
not involved in the study. "Just imagine if the donor happens to be a drug
user. You don't know."
The research published in medical literature cites several
cases of infants getting sick from strangers' milk.
Breast milk is also provided through milk banks, whose
clients include hospitals. They also charge fees but screen donors and
pasteurize donated milk to kill any germs.
With Internet sites, "you have very few ways to know
for sure what you are getting is really breast milk and that it's safe to feed
your baby," said Sarah Keim, the lead author and a researcher at
Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio. "Because the
consequences can be serious, it is not a good idea to obtain breast milk in
this way."
The advice echoes a 2010 recommendation from the federal
Food and Drug Administration.
"When human milk is obtained directly from individuals
or through the Internet, the donor is unlikely to have been adequately screened
for infectious disease or contamination risk," the FDA says. "In
addition, it is not likely that the human milk has been collected, processed,
tested or stored in a way that reduces possible safety risks to the baby."
The researchers believe theirs is the first study to test
the safety of Internet-sold milk, although several others have documented
bacteria in mothers' own milk or in milk bank donations. Some bacteria may not
be harmful, but salmonella is among germs that could pose a threat to infants,
Boyer said.
Sources for bacteria found in the study aren't known but
could include donors' skin, breast pumps used to extract milk, or contamination
from improper shipping methods, Keim said.
The study was published online Monday in the journal
Pediatrics.
There are many milk-sharing sites online, including several
that provide milk for free. Sellers or donors tend to be new mothers who
produce more milk than their own babies can consume. Users include mothers who
have difficulty breast-feeding and don't want to use formula and people with
adopted infants.
Breanna Clemons of Dickinson, N.D., is a donor who found a
local woman who needed breast milk through one of the online sites where milk
is offered free.
"A lot of people are like, 'It's weird,' but they
haven't been in a situation where they didn't want their child to have
formula," or couldn't produce enough milk, Clemons said. She said she
shared her medical history with the recipient.
Clemons is breast-feeding her 7-month-old and stores excess
milk in her freezer. Every few weeks, she meets up with the recipient and gives
her about 20 6-ounce bags. Clemons said the woman has a healthy 9-month-old who
"loves my milk."
Keim said it's unclear if milk from sites offering donated
milk would have the same risks because donors might be different from those
seeking money for their milk. And in a comparison, the researchers found more
bacteria in breast milk purchased online than in 20 unpasteurized samples
donated to a milk bank.
Bekki Hill is a co-founder of Modern Milksharing, an online
support group that offers advice on milk donation. She said there's a
difference between milk sellers and donors; milk donors "don't stand to
gain anything from donating so they have no reason to lie about their
health."
Hill, of Red Hook, N.Y., used a donor's milk for her first
two children and plans to do so for her third, due in February, because she
doesn't produce enough of her own.
"Breast milk is obviously the preferred food" for
babies, she said.
Source : foxnews.com
Source : foxnews.com
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