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Date: | Mon, 23 Oct 2006 12:18:54 -0400 |
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Marsha,
I like this idea, and you are right that someone should do a
careful more formal analysis.
There is a contradiction in using the cost of processing human milk
at a milk bank as the
value of human milk. HMBANA milk is not sold or bought, using the
$3.50-$4.00/oz charged
by HMBANA milk banks will confuse people. What other measures can be
used to put some
kind of dollar value on something as priceless as breast milk? I
think calculations have been
made about health dollars saved by breastfeeding. Can we divide those
dollars by number of
ounces or quarts or gallons of milk and see what we get? Has the
value of blood or other
body fluids or organs been calculated? What measures were used?
Certainly courts are
asked to put dollar values on human life and limb all the time. How
are such measures
made? insurance companies insure the hands of famous cellists, the
legs of athletes. How
are these things measured?
I would also be cautious about using IQ points. I'm not really sure
that IQ is a very good
measure of anything and "intelligence" is very complicated, both
where it comes from
and how to measure it. I worry that when we use the breastfeeding
increases your IQ by
X points argument that we are not taken seriously by people who
should be in this
conversation with us and on our side.
Just some thoughts.
Naomi Bar-Yam
On Oct 22, 2006, at 12:44 PM, LACTNET automatic digest system wrote:
> The price of donor milk could be used for valuing human milk, but
> if it is
> from a Human Milk Banking Association of North America (HMBANA)
> milk bank, the
> $3.50 per ounce is just the processing cost. HMBANA milk is never
> sold. In
> 2005, HMBANA dispensed 713,500 ounces of donor milk and at $3.50/oz
> comes out
> to $2.5 million, a cost effective way to prevent expenditure of
> much more
> money by the health care system.
>
> One mother producing 28oz of milk/day for 365 days would total 10,220
> oz/year. At $3.50/oz, one mother's milk could be worth $35,770,
> while 2 million
> (half of the 4 million babies born each year) lactating women could
> account for
> a milk value of $71 billion.
------------------------------------------
Naomi Bar-Yam Ph.D.
Mothers' Milk Bank of New England
[log in to unmask]
617-964-6676
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