I believe the original posting was asking about cleaning Pump Kits not the Breastpump. It was about the soap used by moms to wash their flanges and other parts after every pumping, not what to wipe the pumps down with between moms. We don't usually specify which soap for moms to use. While in the hospital they use the hand soap, at home we recommend liquid dish detergent. We recommend very thorough rinsing and air drying on a clean towel. And of course good handwashing before handling breasts, pump parts, or breastpumps, (And baby too! That is Mom washing her hands, not baby.) Again we try to follow directions of the pump kit manufacturer.
Susan Watson, BSN, RN, IBCLC-RLC
Level III NICU
--------------------------------------------
Date: Wed, 5 Aug 2015 14:55:19 -0500
From: Holly McSpadden <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: Re: Hospital / NICU question - cleaning pumps
Our hospital infection control told us we had to follow the
manufacturer's recommendations when cleaning the pumps and
that we should not deviate from using whatever disinfectant
they stipulated be used.
Holly
Sent from my iPhone
> On Aug 4, 2015, at 7:48 PM, Dara Barnett <[log in to unmask]>
wrote:
>
> Hello!
>
> Our hospital’s current pump cleaning policy is to
have RNs or Mothers wipe the pump body using wipes
containing CaviCide before and after each use as instructed
by the manufacturer and recommended by HMBANA’s Best
Practices. Recently, Infection
Control has been suggesting that they would like amend our
policy and require housekeeping to “disinfect” our
NICU breast pumps between users by taking them out of the
NICU, cleaning them, allowing to dry, and covering them with
a clean plastic bag before returning them to the NICU.
For what it’s worth, our (Level III)
NICU has periodic MRSA outbreaks and this push for change
may be related – though we/they don’t have concerns or
problems with kit cleaning, or with contaminated milk.
>
> I can’t find any literature suggesting why this
cleaning practice would be necessary / beneficial - if it
exists, I would be grateful to be pointed towards the
papers. We only have 6 pumps to share between 25-40
moms and physically removing them from the unit for cleaning
would be a logistical nightmare. I’ve searched the
Lactnet Archives and this question seems to come up from
time to time, I’m hoping for some wisdom /
ammunition.
>
>
> Many Thanks!
> Dara Barnett
>
>
> Dara Barnett, RN, IBCLC
> Lactation Consultant
> Maimonides Infants and Children’s Hospital
> Brooklyn, NY 11219
>
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