Graeme M said:
I am writing a blog post about dairy and it suddenly occurred to me to wonder at the value of human breastmilk.
There's already a great demand for human breast-milk. Hospitals pay up to $4 an ounce, which currently makes it around $512 a gallon, versus the $0.89 per gallon of cows milk in my area. Human breast milk is higher in carbs (tastes sweeter), has less protein, but cows milk has more of a protein that is more difficult to digest for humans. The fat content is more equivalent, but human milk has more unsaturated fat and has omega-6 and 3's that cow milk doesn't. Cows milk is higher vitamins and minerals like sodium, calcium, potassium, magnesium, vitamin b's and iodine,
not good for infant kidneys, but a
much better fit for adults to consume! I don't see where adults would benefit from the antibodies, natural antibiotics, antitoxins, good bacteria, neurotransmitters, hormones and loads of other goodies in human breast milk.
Adults are equipped to deal with all that for themselves, and that actually not be very good for adults at all! It is meant to be a tailored nutrient source for an infant, breast milk composition changes throughout the day. Even depending upon weather, for example, when a mother is experiencing a very hot day, the body will produce milk for the infant that has less protein, more water, carbs, and electrolytes! If the mother is present with the infant all day, then the infant will gain protection from pathogens that the mother encounters (though it doesn't work so well if the milk is pumped and the infant is exposed to pathogens that the mother has not been). There are many amazing aspects of human breast milk, much is left to learn! Unfortunately, this is one of those touchy topics, so the benefits of it aren't being advertised as much as one would expect. In fact, I encountered a lot of negativity about my own personal choice to breast feed! A few family members were against me doing it (they didn't). There is also much online attempting to shame women for it:
New Study: Breastfeeding Might Be Hazardous To Your Baby's Health! I wouldn't condemn another woman for not breastfeeding, I know myself that it was the most challenging part of being a mother for me! The time, attention, and energy I put into nursing had been far greater than anything else I did for my daughter throughout the day, especially at first! It did get easier over time, I read a lot and learned to multi-task. I hadn't been accustomed to anything needing my attention so much, it was certainly a shocking experience at first! I don't condemn other women for using formula, I don't know their situation, and I know how lucky I've been to be able to stay at home and take care of her. Not all have that opportunity.
There's broad agreement in the milk-banking industry of a shortage of human milk available for hospitals and NICUs.
The nonprofit Human Milk Banking Association of North America estimates that there are 4,000 mothers using its banks across the country and that it would take 60,000 to meet the demand for milk in hospitals nationwide.
I'm not sure what the maximum ounces are that women can pump in one day. I mainly nursed (you can't really measure it there), but did pump extra for excursions/bottles. After my daughter was 6 months I suppose she was getting 25-35 ounces a day from nursing, and usually was still able to pump 8-12 ounces to freeze. It takes around 20 calories to produce one ounce of human breast milk (worth 20 calories); whereas, an ounce of whole cows milk is just 12 calories. There is a lot of time involved in nursing and pumping, which you can
not do all day long, there are intervals (hers was 2.5-4 hours) and maximum pumping times; around 30 minutes seemed to be the very most that I could pump (from both breasts). A cow can produce 6 gallons a day, and the most I probably produced in a day couldn't have been more than 60 ounces (a half gallon)! I recall getting around 3-4 ounces and pumping 15/20 minutes. A woman could be making $48/hour if she produces 3 ounces every 15 minutes! But, like I said there are many limitations, that would only be in theory. Anyway, where do you reckon you'd get the women willing to pump for money when not all women can't breastfeed their infants as it is (they are having to work usually)? Pulling that many women out of the workforce to pump would cause a national disaster in order to match the entire child/adult consumption of cows milk in the US!
Even so, in order to mass produce human breast milk, steroids and other hormones would have to be taken, which isn't healthy for cows, much less humans. It would also have to be pasteurized and the milk would have to be screened for toxins/pollutants like breast milk banks already do. I do see there being a great benefit to mothers and children in selling breast milk, I can see pumping an extra 20 ounces a day bringing in $2400 a month (if the prices remained steady and supply consistent), which would allow them to be together. That probably wouldn't be enough to totally support costs of living nowadays, but if the father were already working then it might. But, I don't see adults being able to afford $512 a gallon, or it being a health benefit to adults any more than cows milk. It could actually be bad for adults to consume, there isn't much research on the topic.