Breast milk sold online may be contaminated with cow's milk - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 10:59 PM | Calgary | -6.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Health

Breast milk sold online may be contaminated with cow's milk

Some human breast milk sold online has been contaminated with cows milk, which could pose a problem to infants with milk allergy or intolerance, researchers say.

Sampling of breast milk purchased online showed 10% was adulterated with cow's milk

Official human breast milk banks at hospitals screen and pasteurize donated milk to reduce infectious disease risk, but have struggled to keep up with demand. (Laura Seitz/Deseret News/Associated Press)

Some human breast milk sold online has been contaminated with cow's milk, which could pose a problem to infants with milk allergy or intolerance, researchers say.

Health Canadaand the U.S. Food and Drug Administration recommend against feeding infants human milk from unscreened sources because of infection and other risks. Despite the warnings, online sales, postings and advertisements for breast milk have grown in popularity.

Members of the Human Milk Banking Association of North America, which includes Canadian milk banks, don't compensate donors on the grounds thatselling could increase the risk. The official banks screen and pasteurize donated milk to reduce the risk of infectious disease, but have struggled to keep up with demand from hospitals for the most premature and sickest babies.

The U.S. researchers bought 102 samples of human milk breast milk anonymously online and DNA tested for contamination withcow's milk.

"Eleven of 102 (11 per cent) purchased internet samples contained both human and bovine DNA. Ten had bovine DNA concentrations high enough to rule out minor, incidental contamination, suggesting some sellers unintentionally or intentionally added to human milk a significant amount of a cow's milk product,"Sarah Keim of Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, and her co-authors concluded in Monday's issue of Pediatrics.

"Cow's milk can be problematic if ingested by an infant with cow's milk protein allergy or intolerance."

Since buyers or users aren't readily able to verify the composition of milk, "all should be aware of the possibility that it may be adulterated,"they advised.

Previously, Keim's team reported that most of the breast milk they bought online grew pathogenic bacteria or had bacterial counts that made it unsuitable for infants to drink.