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Date: | Wed, 17 Oct 2007 10:18:09 -0400 |
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Hello, All: I think this has been discussed before. Wet tubing has been called
to Medela's attention. When I mentioned my concerns to the area Medela rep
I was told that Medela did not perceive this as a problem. All a mom had to do
was soak the tubing in bleach and to dry it, just whip it around. And when all
else fails, she can just buy new tubing! I have had far too many moms asking
me if the "black stuff" in their tubing is a problem. Moms tell me that Medela
assures them that it's not really a problem and not to worry about it. It seems
to me that the problem of condensation and milk in tubing began when Medela
reconfigured the design of the flange. They moved the tube insertion hole
from the top of the flange to the bottom a number of years ago - I began
seeing the problem of wet tubing not long after this change.
I am a hospital-based lactation consultant. My worst nightmare is that we
trace an outbreak of XYZ infection in our SCN to moldy breast pump tubing!
Thank God this has never happened in my 25+ years of hospital-based
practice!
With the recent publicity MRSA is getting in the media here in the US (the lead
story on the TODAY show this morning was on how MRSA now kills more
people each year in the US than AIDS), it would behoove all of us to pay a lot
more attention to the "infection control" issues that wet tubing is raising.
Pam Hirsch, BSN,RN,IBCLC
Clinical Lead, Lactation Seervices
Advocate Good Shepherd Hospital
Barrington, IL USA
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