Fad Craze For Human Breast Milk Is A Serious Health Risk

The recent craze for human breast milk amongst certain fitness communities and fetishists is ill advised.

The recent craze for human breast milk amongst certain fitness communities and fetishists is ill advised.

Like many food fads, from organic to placenta smoothies, the market for adult buyers of human breast milk has become lucrative.  Shady opportunists and nutrition salespeople describe it as a 'clean' super food that can lead to gains in the gym, help with erectile dysfunction and cancer, and some even claim that it is more digestible and contains positive immune building properties. An editorial in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, led by Dr. Sarah Steele of Queen Mary University of London, write that these purported benefits do not stand up clinically and raw human milk purchased online or in an unpasteurized state poses many risks.

"Nutritionally there is less protein in breast milk than other milks like cow's milk," said Steele. She and her colleagues write that the benefits of breast milk are being found in the lab, not in drinking a bottle ordered online. "Potential buyers should be made aware that no scientific study evidences that direct adult consumption of human milk for medicinal properties offers anything more than a placebo effect, said Dr Steele. The authors warn that human milk is potentially very hazardous if used to replace a healthy balanced diet.

Failure of women to sanitize properly when expressing milk, the failure to sterilize equipment properly, and the improper or prolonged storage and transportation of milk can expose consumers to bacterial food-borne illnesses like any other raw milk.

The lack of pasteurization and testing not only indicates a bacterial risk but also exposes consumers to a host of infectious diseases, including hepatitis, HIV and syphilis. "While many online mums claim they have been tested for viruses during pregnancy, many do not realize that serological screening needs to be undertaken regularly," said Steele. "Sexual and other activities in the postpartum period may expose the woman expressing to viruses that they may unwittingly pass on to consumers of the milk."

The authors call for health professionals and regulators to issue public guidance against the purchasing of human milk from Internet sources for adult as well as infant feeding.

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