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Subject:
From:
Janice Reynolds <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Lactation Information and Discussion <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 26 Apr 2007 23:16:28 -0600
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Today, wet nurses; tomorrow, a global breast milk trade?

 

http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/node/4561

 

Thu, 04/26/2007 - 3:43pm.

JAY DIRECTO/AFP

In January, FP featured a piece about the
<http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=3690> International
Breast Milk Project, in which American women who produce excess breast milk
donate it for shipment to newborn orphans in Africa.

But what if the milk flow were to go in the opposite direction? What if
women in developing countries were paid to ship their breast milk to moms in
the West?

A recent  <http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1612710,00.html>
article in Time magazine discusses wet nurses-women who are paid to
breast-feed other women's babies. Apparently, the old custom is reemerging a
bit in the United States. More American women work outside the home at jobs
that don't make it easy to breast-feed. More women have breast implants.
Some women adopt children.

As a result, a few American women have hired wet nurses through
<http://certifiedhouseholdstaffing.com/> CertifiedHouseholdStaffing.com.
Others buy bottled breast milk from nonprofit "milk banks." One company,
<http://www.prolacta.com/> Prolacta Bioscience, is the country's first
for-profit processor of donated breast milk. (It sells to neonatal units,
not individuals.)

But if the for-profit breast-milk industry grows (in 2005, demand for breast
milk from one nonprofit association of milk banks grew
<http://marketplace.publicradio.org/shows/2006/05/16/PM200605165.html> 28
percent), where will companies get all their milk once altruistic donors run
dry? If they follow the model of other American businesses, they might turn
to the developing world for their raw material-in this case, breast milk. 

It would be expensive to ship frozen milk across continents and oceans, but
given that Prolacta last year was marketing milk at
<http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/04/09/MNGLKI6FTA1.DTL
> $35 per ounce, it's possible that paying low amounts to women in the
developing world would make importing a viable business strategy.

Clearly, though, there are a lot of sensitive questions to be debated. Is
this exploitation of poor women, or is it giving them income for a body
fluid they supposedly can't use anyway? In India, women are already
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16988881/> renting out their wombs to Western
women. The next logical step, it seems, would be breast rental.

 

Janice Reynolds

 


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