Study warns against buying breast milk online
Researchers found that three-quarters of breast milk samples bought online were unsafe for babies
Most of the breast milk sold over the internet is contaminated with bacteria, a new study suggests.
Researchers tested 101 milk samples they bought on milk sharing websites. They found that almost three-quarters probably weren’t safe for babies, especially premature infants.
Those sites have thousands of ads from people selling breast milk, often new mothers who make more than their baby needs. The milk typically sells for US$1 or US$2 per ounce.
“If you buy milk on the internet, you have no idea what you’re getting,” said Sarah Keim. She led the study at the Research Institute at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio.
“A buyer would just have no way of being able to know with the information they have whether that milk is safe.”
Keim said she and her colleagues had noticed milk sharing websites popping up over the past few years.