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Storing Mother's Milk - AmedaBaby.com
Date each freezer bag.
Storing your milk in the same container you collect it in is very convenient.
It saves time, minimizes waste of your precious milk, and reduces the
risk of contamination. Hard-sided containers, whether glass or plastic,
work best to protect your milk. Many working women use plastic freezer
storage bags that are pre-sterilized, take up less room in the freezer,
and can be attached directly to a breast pumping kit. Avoid disposable
plastic bags called bottle liners because the liners are designed for
bottle-feeding, not storage. Milk storage times vary, but the following
are accepted guidelines.
STORAGE GUIDELINES:

As frequently as possible, use milk that is fresh
or has been refrigerated, not frozen. Freezing milk kills some antibodies,
although frozen breast milk is still much better for your baby than
infant formula (Mohrbacher, 1997).
FREEZING:
Freeze your milk in the smallest amounts your
baby might take at a feeding. Baby can be offered a little at a time
to minimize waste. Do not refreeze thawed milk. Studies are unclear
about whether human milk from a partially finished bottle should be
discarded, as recommended for infant formula. Bottle liners are not
recommended for freezing breast milk because liners are not as thick
as freezer bags and have a tendency to split, crack or leak. If you
do use bottle liners, "double bagging" will help avoid milk
loss. In addition, place milk stored in bags in a separate hard-sided
container in your freezer to protect the bags from being jostled. Leave
room in the container for milk to expand as it freezes and always date
each container.
The Human Milk Banking Association of North America.
There are several human milk banks in the United States and Canada.
These milk banks screen donors, process their donated milk, and distribute
it to babies who have a medical need for human milk but whose mothers
can't provide it for them. If you have extra mother's milk, please consider
donating it to a milk bank. The screening process is similar to that
for blood donation. For more information, call the Lactation Center
and Mother's Milk Bank at WakeMed in Raleigh, NC, 919-350-8599.
THAWING:
Frozen milk can be thawed quickly and evenly under
warm, never hot, running tap water. Don't thaw milk in a microwave oven
because it may destroy nutrients and create hot spots that can burn
your baby's mouth. Thawed, previously frozen milk can be kept in a refrigerator
for 24 hours. Because cream separates and floats to the top, shake the
milk gently to distribute the fat through the milk before feeding baby.
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