A new reasearh shown that, 1 at of ten
samples of breast milk sold on the internet in the United States was
found to be contaminated with cow's milk or formula, US researchers said
Monday.
The
study in the journal Pediatrics raised new safety concerns about a
practice that many experts already discourage over the potential for
danger to babies' health.
Researchers
tested 102 samples of breast milk advertised on milk-sharing websites,
frequented by mothers who want to buy breast milk for their infants.
They found
that 11 of the samples contained bovine DNA, and 10 of those had enough
that it could not be considered an accidental contamination, suggesting
that some sellers were adding cow's milk in order to boost their volume
and profits.
'We
found that one in every 10 samples of breast milk purchased over the
Internet had significant amounts of cow's milk added, and this poses a
risk to infants with an allergy or intolerance to cow's milk,' said
study author Sarah Keim, of the Center for Biobehavioral Health in The
Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Ohio.
'If a baby with cow's milk allergy were to drink this milk, it could be very harmful.'
The
same researchers have previously found that 21 percent of people who
look for human breast milk online do so because their child has a
medical condition, and 16 percent said they did so because their infant
could not drink formula.
They
also found in previous research that more than 75 percent of milk
samples purchased online contained bacterial or viral contamination.
It
is not the first time that experts have issued warnings to mothers
about the purchase of breast milk from an unknown source.
The
US Food and Drug Administration stated in 2010 that unpasteurized human
milk obtained from sources other than the baby's mother could pose
serious health risks.
Source:
dm
No comments:
Post a Comment