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Date: | Wed, 28 Sep 2011 10:02:06 -0400 |
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I only have personal experience to offer on this subject. I also had to
use donor milk because of a cancer dx/treatment. This was also a problem for
me, and I suspect it is because of moving and transporting the milk and the
milk "hitting" each other and causing the problem. We used plastic grocery
bags to transport the milk maybe a box or bin would be better and less
hitting. I found the gerber to be the worst and had leaks many times, then
lansinoh had a few and never had a leak with Medela. (Still mad at them for not
being code complaint! But the bags were my fave since I could count on
them not to leak.) It was very frustrating to not know until after it starts
to thaw which ones had holes/rips! I personally hated to throw the milk out
(and needed all I could get in the beginning not knowing how much milk I
would be able to get) so I thawed it in a clean container that had a lid in
the fridge and it would catch the milk as it thawed and I would use it. My
baby was a healthy full term baby.
Also, here is some of what I posted before on this sort of topic
"I would say at least half of the breastmilk that was used was past 6 mth
old and the oldest was just shy of 12 mths old and I had about 2 wks worth
of it that I couldn't bear to throw away and not use, so I used it.
I can't even count how many times that I broke this rule "finish or throw
away within an hour of the start of a feed" due to him not wanting it all,
or falling asleep, or traveling and out and about, leaving it by my bed so
he can finish it when he would wake in the middle of the night, taking a
cold bottle of milk and having it warm up in the diaper bag while out and then
feed it to him etc
My son never showed any taste dislike or stomach upset or other signs of
trouble from this. I was such a rule person before this! But daily life and
a real crying baby came into play and the practicality of trying to feed him
that didn't lend it self to following all the "rules" for which I didn't
see an overwhelming amount of evidence for the healthy full term baby. I
also wondered if many of these rules comes from what we say about formula and
just stuck them on breastmilk. AND no big studies on breastmilk use. This
is what I became comfortable with doing for my baby after seeing no effects
on my baby. If I had seen things I would have changed things. Thankfully
due to me being sick I am not leading nursing mom meetings or taking phone
calls anymore because it would be hard for me to list all the rules for a
mom now that I truly understand about trying to follow them and that also
goes the same for the La Leche League statement on using donor milk. I say
give moms all the info (or lack of info regarding these issues!) and risks and
let them decide how to handle it. Perhaps you can say these are the rules
but I knew of a mom who did this....."
And an update for those who had followed my posts about my situation--- my
baby just turned 2 years old on Sept 8 and he still gets donor milk, about
9oz a day and we will have enough donor milk to get him till the end of
November! You have no idea how comforting this has been to me that at least
he got milk this long since I am used to nursing for years his other
siblings.
Kim Ann Lorber
LLL Leader Quad Cities IA/IL
[log in to unmask] (mailto:[log in to unmask])
_http://cancercaughtme.blogspot.com/_ (http://cancercaughtme.blogspot.com/)
In a message dated 9/28/2011 8:36:15 A.M. Central Daylight Time,
[log in to unmask] writes:
Permission to post: a mother who is exclusively using donor milk for her 2
week old infant due to double mastectomy asked me about using milk that
has minute holes in the bag that are only discovered as the milk thaws.
These small tears occurred during transfer of milk to other freezers during
hurricane Irene. The milk had been stored in a chest freezer and mom thinks
when they grabbed bags of milk to store elsewhere in a hurry, the damage to
some bags occurred. She's wondering if she needs to discard this milk?
The dilemma is that she can't separate them from intact bags since she
doesn't see the hole or tear until milk leaks from bag during defrosting.
Understandably, she doesn't want to discard the milk unless absolutely necessary.
Thoughts, anyone? I'm unsure of any absolutes with this and wonder about
the risk/benefit ratio in regard to later formula use when she runs out of
milk. Also, she questioned if there's any research about using milk that
has been frozen for over a year in a deep freezer chest. Someone's recent
post about this, too, hasn't received any responses yet either. Thank you.
Barbara Latterner, BSN, RN, IBCLC
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