Breast milk sold online may be contaminated with disease-causing bacteria, researchers have found.
After noticing more women offering to buy and sell breast milk over the Internet, researchers launched a study to
see how safe that milk really is. They sent anonymous purchasing
requests to about 500 sellers on a popular U.S. milk-sharing website.
About half of the sellers answered, and finally about 100 milk shipments
arrived.
"We
found three quarters of the milk that we studied was contaminated,
either with high levels of bacteria, or certain disease-causing
bacteria, like the kind found in human waste," said study author Sarah
Keim, researcher at Nationwide Children's Hospital, in Columbus, Ohio.
The
breast milk was frequently contaminated with coliform bacteria, which
are commonly used as indicators of the sanitary quality of food, and
staphylococcus bacteria, which grow in improperly stored foods. Three
samples were contaminated with Salmonella, according to the study published today (Oct. 21) in the journal Pediatrics.
"Some
of these bacteria come from mother's skin and are usually harmless at
normal levels. But coliform and salmonella could be coming from
elsewhere," Keim said. "We know from another study that about two-thirds
of women who use a breast pump never wash" its parts, she said.
Other
sources of contamination could include not washing hands before
obtaining and storing milk, or bacteria from other foods in the freezer
where milk is stored, she said.
While certain bacteria are natural components of breast milk and are healthy for the baby,
abnormal levels of some types of bacteria, and contamination with
disease-causing bacteria could be dangerous to infants, especially those
who were born pre-mature or have weak immune systems, the researchers
said. A previous study showed about 20 percent of people looking online
for breast milk mention they have a baby who was born pre-mature or has a
health condition.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration warns against feeding babies breast milk obtained online,
as the donor is unlikely to have been tested for infectious disease,
and it's not clear whether the milk has been collected and stored
safely. The agency, however, doesn't regulate breast milk, as it's
categorized differently than blood or other highly regulated donated
tissues.
In
the study, the researchers compared the Internet-purchased samples with
unpasteurized breast milk samples from a hospital's milk bank, and
found higher overall bacterial counts in the Internet samples.
Sixty-four percent of the Internet samples tested positive for
staphylococcous, compared to 25 percent of milk bank samples.
The
results also showed that each additional transit day was associated
with an increase in total bacteria count in milk purchased online.
There
are other avenues for risk as well, the researchers said. Women who are
lactating and selling their extra milk could be using medications, or
could be exposed to chemicals because of their occupation, some of which
could find their way into the milk.
"There's
also the possibility that milk has been watered down or mixed with cow
milk, which is not healthy for the infant," Keim said.
Mothers who want to provide breast milk to
their infants but have difficulty making enough should work with their
pediatrician and consider using lactation support services, Keim said.
Women who produce extra milk may want to consider donating to a milk
bank, she said.
Source: live science
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