• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Comparison between the for‐profit human milk industry and nonprofit human milk banking: Time for regulation?
  • Contributor: Shenker, Natalie; Linden, Jonathan; Wang, Betty; Mackenzie, Claudia; Hildebrandt, Alex Pueyo; Spears, Jacqui; Davis, Danielle; Nangia, Sushma; Weaver, Gillian
  • Published: Wiley, 2024
  • Published in: Maternal & Child Nutrition, 20 (2024) 1
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1111/mcn.13570
  • ISSN: 1740-8695; 1740-8709
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: AbstractHuman milk (HM) is a highly evolutionary selected, complex biofluid, which provides tailored nutrition, immune system support and developmental cues that are unique to each maternal–infant dyad. In the absence of maternal milk, the World Health Organisation recommends vulnerable infants should be fed with screened donor HM (DHM) from a HM bank (HMB) ideally embedded in local or regional lactation support services. However, demand for HM products has arisen from an increasing awareness of the developmental and health impacts of the early introduction of formula and a lack of prioritisation into government‐funded and nonprofit milk banking and innovation. This survey of global nonprofit milk bank leaders aimed to outline the trends, commonalities and differences between nonprofit and for‐profit HM banking, examine strategies regarding the marketing and placement of products to hospital and public customers and outline the key social, ethical and human rights concerns. The survey captured information from 59 milk bank leaders in 30 countries from every populated continent. In total, five companies are currently trading HM products with several early‐stage private milk companies (PMCs). Products tended to be more expensive from PMC than HMB, milk providers were financially remunerated and lactation support for milk providers and recipients was not a core function of PMCs. Current regulatory frameworks for HM vary widely, with the majority of countries lacking any framework, and most others placing HM within food legislation, which does not include the support and care of milk donors and recipient prioritisation. Regulation as a Medical Product of Human Origin was only in place to prevent the sale of HM in four countries; export and import of HM was banned in two countries. This paper discusses the safety and ethical concerns raised by the commodification of HM and the opportunities policymakers have globally and country‐level to limit the potential for exploitation and the undermining of breastfeeding.
  • Access State: Open Access