Contemporary Ethical Issues in Human Milk-Banking in the United States

Author:

Miracle Donna J.123,Szucs Kinga A.45678,Torke Alexia M.3591011,Helft Paul R.351213

Affiliation:

1. Rush University College of Nursing, Chicago, Illinois;

2. Indiana Mothers' Milk Bank, Inc, Indianapolis, Indiana;

3. Charles Warren Fairbanks Center for Medical Ethics, Indiana University Health, Indianapolis, Indiana;

4. Divisions of Pediatrics,

5. Department of Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana;

6. Riley Hospital for Children, Indianapolis, Indiana;

7. Newborn Nursery, Wishard Health Services, Indianapolis, Indiana;

8. American Academy of Pediatrics Section on Breastfeeding Executive Committee, Elk Grove Village, Illinois;

9. General Medicine and Geriatrics, and

10. Indiana University Center for Aging Research,

11. Regenstrief Institute, Indianapolis, Indiana; and

12. Hematology/Oncology and

13. Indiana University Melvin and Bren Simon Cancer Center, Indianapolis, Indiana

Abstract

Donor human milk has been used in the United States for >90 years, but recent advances in human milk science and laboratory techniques have led to increasing use of this resource. Pediatricians began using donor human milk in the 1900s in response to anecdotal observation that premature infants had better health outcomes when receiving their own mothers' milk. Since then, a formalized human milk-banking system developed in the mid-1980s and distributed >1 million ounces of pasteurized donor human milk in 2008. Despite growth in the use of pasteurized donor human milk, there is little discussion in the medical literature regarding the ethical considerations of collection and use of this resource. Key ethical considerations include issues surrounding medical decision-making and informed consent, increasing the limited supply of human milk, how ethically to allocate this scarce resource, and concerns linked to the marketing of a human milk.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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