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Human Milk Banking Association of North America
Breastfeeding is the First Line of Defense in a Disaster
Washington, DC - The Human
Milk Banking Association of North America
(HMBANA),
United States Breastfeeding Committee
(USBC), International
Lactation Consultant Association/United States Lactation
Consultant Association (ILCA/USLCA),
and La Leche League International (LLLI)
strongly affirm the importance of breastfeeding in emergency situations,
and call on relief workers and health care providers serving victims of
disasters to protect, promote, and support mothers to breastfeed their
babies. During an emergency, breastfeeding mothers provide their infants
with safe food and water and disease protection that maximize their
chances of survival.
This week, the International Breast Milk Project
and Quick International Courier coordinated a shipment of
milk from the HMBANA
member banks to supplement a mother's own milk for the premature, medically fragile, and
orphaned infants aboard the U.S. Navy ship
Comfort stationed off the
coast of Haiti. This milk will help this small group of infants. In this
highly unusual circumstance the infrastructure associated with the
Comfort's resources allows U.S. sourced donor milk to help fragile
Haitian babies.
Donor milk, however, is not a solution for the large number of infants
and young children affected by the earthquake in Haiti. Members of the
public who wish to promote the survival of mothers and babies in Haiti
can donate money to the following organizations: UNICEF ,
Save the Children Alliance,
World Vision, and
Action Against Hunger.
These organizations are using best practice to aid both breastfed and
non-breastfed infants. Members of the public can be confident that
donations to these organizations will support breastfeeding and help
save the lives of babies.
Interventions to protect infants include supporting mothers to initiate
and continue exclusive breastfeeding, relactation for mothers who have
ceased breastfeeding, and finding wet nurses for motherless or separated
babies. Every effort should be made to minimize the number of infants
and young children who do not have access to breastfeeding. Artificially
fed infants require intensive support from aid organizations including
infant formula, clean water, soap, a stove, fuel, education, and medical
support. This is not an easy endeavor. Formula feeding is extremely
risky in emergency conditions and artificially fed infants are
vulnerable to the biggest killers of children in emergencies: diarrhea
and pneumonia.
As stated by UNICEF and
WHO, no donations of infant formula or powdered
milk should be sent to the Haiti emergency. Such donations are difficult
to manage logistically, actively detract from the aid effort, and put
infant's lives at risk. Distribution of infant formula should only occur
in a strictly controlled manner. Stress does not prevent women from
making milk for their babies, and breastfeeding women should not be
given any infant formula or powdered milk.
There are ongoing needs in the U.S. for human milk for premature and
other extremely ill infants because of the protection it provides from
diseases and infections. If a mother is unable to provide her own milk
to her premature or sick infant, donor human milk is often requested
from a human milk bank. American mothers can help their compatriots who
find themselves in need of breast milk for their sick baby by donating
to a milk bank that is a member of the
Human
Milk Banking Association of North America.
For more information about donating milk to a milk bank, contact
HMBANA
here.
Additional information for relief workers and health care professionals can be provided from the
United States Breastfeeding Committee,
ILCA/USLCA, or
La Leche League International. A list of regional milk banks is available
here.
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