Great Response to the "Shipped Breastmilk" Article Recently Published in Pediatrics
Allison Stube, MD wrote the following response to the article which discussed online purchases of breast milk, found to be "teeming with bacteria". As Paul Harvey would say, here is "the rest of the story."
Alison
Stuebe, of the Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine wrote the following
response to the milk sharing study in Pediatrics published on line this
week.
Breastfeeding Medicine
A new study in Pediatrics has spawned provocative headlines,
contrasting images of human milk as “a nourishing elixir, or a bacterial
brew.” Researchers anonymously bought breast milk from 102 online
sellers. Milk orders were often packaged poorly, arrived well above
freezing, and — as one might expect with milk unrefrigerated for days —
were rife with bacteria.
But that’s really not the whole story.
First, consider who participated in the study. By design, the authors
communicated with sellers only by email, and cut off the conversation if
the sellers asked about the recipient infant or wanted to talk by phone
or in person. Milk was shipped to a rented mailbox to make the process
anonymous. Of the 495 sellers the authors contacted, 191 sellers never
responded, 41 stopped corresponding before making a sale, and 57 were
excluded because they wanted to communicate by phone or asked about the
recipient baby. Another 105 did not complete a transaction, leaving 102
of the original 495 sellers approached who actually shipped milk. Of
these, half the samples took more than 2 days to ship, and 19% had no
cooling agent in the package.
It’s highly plausible that milk
sent with no questions asked, via 2 day or longer shipment, and (in 1
and 5 cases) without any cooling whatsoever, was collected with less
attention to basic hygienic precautions. The bacterial load in study
milk samples therefore doesn’t tell us about the relative safety of milk
obtained following a conversation between buyer and seller about the
recipient baby and then shipped overnight on dry ice in a
laboratory-quality cooler. Indeed, when the authors compared online
milk purchases with samples donated to a milk bank after a screening and
selection process, they found much lower rates of bacterial
contamination. The authors acknowledge this limitation in the study,
but that subtlety has been lost in the media coverage.
It’s
also not clear from the study to what extent bacteria found in milk
reflect contamination vs. “good bacteria” that are present in milk. A
growing literature demonstrates that “fresh from the tap” breast milk
contains a wide variety of bacteria, and these bacteria colonize the
infant’s gut. The study reported in Pediatrics did not distinguish
between species of bacteria, nor did they compare the frozen samples
with freshly expressed breast milk. The salient question is not, “Is
there any bacteria in milk bought online?” but “How much more
disease-causing bacteria is present in milk bought online, compared to
milk that’s fresh from the breast?”
Moreover, news coverage has
not considered the broader context of infection risk in infant feeding.
Powdered infant formula is not sterile. Therefore, both the World
Health Organization the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
recommend feeding all newborn babies liquid formula. If a newborn is fed
powdered formula, the WHO and the CDC recommend cleaning bottles in a
dish washer with hot water and a heated drying cycle, heating water to
at least 158 degrees F (70 degrees Celsius) to make formula, and using
formula within 2 hours of preparation.
Studies suggest that
most parents don’t follow these guidelines. Importantly, formula
packaging doesn’t include the CDC language, instead advising parents to
“ask your baby’s doctor about the need to sterilize water and
preparation utensils before mixing formula.”
Online information
from formula companies is even less explicit. In an article titled, “10
Things to Know about Bottle Feeding,” a formula company web site
suggests:
If baby wakes you up to eat, try this tip from New
York City mom Michele Bender: ‘I’d measure the formula and keep the
powder, water, and bottle on my night table. I could mix it right there
rather than having to go to the kitchen. It sounds minor, but at 3 a.m.,
one less step is great.’
These instructions directly
contradict WHO and CDC recommendations by suggesting parents use room
temperature water to mix formula. Given the very large number of
infants who are fed powdered formula, inaccurate information on formula
preparation is a far greater hazard for infant health than milk bought
online.
What we need is education on safe handling of food for
infants to minimize the risk of food-borne infection for babies. ABM has
published evidence-based guidelines for human milk collection and
storage, and HMBANA has developed detailed guidelines on safe milk
collection. Broadly disseminating this information will provide mothers
who are milk sharing with guidance on how to minimize risk. Health care
providers need to engage families, inquire about milk sharing, and
discuss this practice in an informed consent context, rather than
dismissing milk sharing as unacceptable. Similarly, we need
formula-feeding families to have complete information on how to minimize
risk of catastrophic infections.
And then there’s the “ick” factor – what The Verge alluded to in their coverage as “Women and their dirty femine fluids.”
In a provocative essay titled, Milk sharing and formula feeding: Infant
feeding risks in comparative perspective?, Karleen D. Gribble and
Bernice L. Hausman explore why health authorities proscribe human milk
sharing as dangerous, but provide parents with information to assist
them in the management of the risks of formula feeding.
There
is a well recorded historical legacy of suspicion concerning mothers and
their milk. In its current iteration, this suspicion leads to the
conclusion that corporations are considered more trustworthy than women
to provide healthful nutriment to infants.
Cultural
proscriptions around breastfeeding and milk-sharing are not new, but
rather reflect centuries of debate about the role of women’s bodies in
society. As Lia Moran and Jacob Gilad write in From Folklore to
Scientific Evidence: Breast-Feeding and Wet-Nursing in Islam and the
Case of Non-Puerperal Lactation:
It should be clear by now that
in many societies the rules regarding breast-feeding, were laid down by
men, and tend to support male-dominated institutions. For example, in
those countries which observe Muslim civil law, the duty of a woman to
feed her husband’s children, the duration of feeding and the conditions
under which she may feed children other than her own, thus establishing
links of milk-kinship, are all prescribed by a male-dominated paternal
legal system. The feeding of one woman’s child by another has been used
in different societies to make peace between two tribes, to consolidate
clan unity, to prevent marriage, to create clients, and in sum, to
attain objectives which lie far beyond the nursing woman’s own interest.
Indeed, the nursing woman’s own interest is not part of the discourse
around online milk sales. The market for human milk exists because of
the mismatch between promoting “breast is best” and prioritizing real
support for mothers and babies. Moms buy milk online because they want
to breastfeed, but they are unable to meet their infant’s needs with
their own milk. Often, these moms are victims of the “Booby Traps” that
stymie so many women, ranging from uninformed health care providers to
outdated maternity practices and bottom-of-the-barrel policies for
parental leave in the United States. In other cases, a mother’s body
simply can’t make enough milk for her baby, despite heroic efforts to
sustain breastfeeding. We could obviate much of the demand for online
milk sales if we changed policies and practices. We might also find ways
for more moms to make enough milk if we devoted a fraction of the
resources currently directed at erectile dysfunction to lactation
dysfunction.
“Breast milk as bacterial brew” pushes lots of
cultural buttons — from the “ick factor” to our reliance on
mass-produced and marketed substitutes, rather than women, to nourish
our children. Let’s stop pressing buttons, and start looking for
solutions, so that more families can achieve their infant feeding goals.
Alison Stuebe, MD, MSc, is a maternal-fetal medicine physician,
breastfeeding researcher, and assistant professor of Obstetrics and
Gynecology at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine. She
is a member of the board of the Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine. Posts
on the ABM blog reflect the opinions of individual authors, not the
organization a whole.
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