Milk Collection and Storage
Milk collection and storage:The following are general guidelines for collecting and storing
breast milk when using a hospital-grade electric breast pump. If the NICU
gives you more specific instructions, follow their recommendations.
Getting ready:Before you begin to pump:
- Be sure to read the instruction manual for the breast pump and
collection kit you are using. (Both items should be manufactured by the
same company.)
- Breast milk is not sterile, but you do not want to introduce
"outside" bacteria when getting ready to pump, during the actual pumping
session, or when storing milk or transporting it to the NICU.
- Always wash and rinse your hands thoroughly before handling any
clean pump parts, your breasts, or the milk collection
bottles/containers.
- Certain pump collection kit parts must be cleaned and sterilized,
according to the instruction manual. Most recommend thorough cleaning
of these parts after each use and sterilizing parts at least once in
24 hours.
- The collection bottles/containers that attach to the pump and are
used to collect and store your milk should be sterile. (The NICU may
be able to supply the sterile collection containers.)
- Read the instruction manual first, but you may have to experiment
with different techniques and settings on the breast pump before you
find ones that work best for you. The following are some general tips:
- Some mothers moisten the rim of the breast flange before pumping
to create a better seal on the breast.
- Some mothers prefer to center the breast flanges on the nipple and
areola first and then turn the pump on; others turn the pump on first
and then place the flanges over the breasts.
- Start the pump at the low/minimal suction setting and gradually
move the setting to increase the level of suction. The level usually
is set as high as comfort allows. Decrease the suction if it causes
discomfort.
- Suction cannot be maintained if the seal of the flange on the
breast is broken, so check the seal of the flange periodically. Also
watch for the rhythmic pull and release of the nipple and areola
within the flange.
- Expect to pump for a few minutes before you see a steady flow of
milk.
- Do not fill collection bottles more than 2/3 full to avoid any
back flow of milk and to allow for expansion if milk is to be frozen.
If you easily fill bottles, have additional collection bottles ready.
Stop and change bottles as needed. If your baby takes more than the
amount in one bottle at a feeding, you might attach collection bottles
that can hold a larger amount to the breast flange.
- When you are ready to stop pumping, use a clean finger to press in
on your breast just above the pump breast flange. This should break
the seal between the flange and the breast tissue. If milk has pooled
in a flange, tilt it so that milk can drain into the collection bottle
as you remove the flange. Then turn off the breast pump. (Some mothers
turn the breast pump off first, and then break the seal between the
flange and the breast.)
Storing your breast milk:
- combining milk
If you pumped both breasts at once and the total amount of milk
obtained will fill one bottle no more than 2/3 full, you may combine the
contents in one bottle by carefully pouring the milk from one sterile
container into the other. Do not combine milk from different pumping
sessions when pumping for a high-risk baby.
- label the collection container(s) immediately
Labels should include the baby's name, the date, the time of day
obtained, and any medications or substances, such as cigarette
by-products that you have taken, or been exposed, to since the last
pumping session.
- fresh breast milk
"Fresh breast milk" contains the most active anti-infective
properties. Refrigerated breast milk has fewer anti-infective properties
than fresh milk and frozen breast milk has the least.
- If using unrefrigerated, fresh breast milk, it should be fed to a
baby within an hour of being pumped. Do not leave milk out longer than
30 to 60 minutes when it is to be given to a high-risk baby. This
risks contamination - something a high-risk baby does not need.
- It is not always possible to give a baby fresh breast milk or you
may obtain more than needed for a feeding, so refrigerate any other
milk in the labeled collection bottles immediately. The refrigerator
should be at a temperature of 32° F to 39° F.
- Freeze labeled collection bottles if the milk will not be used
within 24 to possibly 48 hours. (The NICU staff will let you know
whether they are using 24 hours or 48 hours as a guideline.)
- Do not freeze breast milk that has been refrigerated for more than
24 to 48 hours. Although milk has been shown to be safe when
refrigerated for several days, experts usually recommend freezing milk
sooner when it is to be given to a high-risk baby.
- Milk can be frozen for approximately:
- two to four weeks if the freezer compartment is within the
refrigerator. (You must open the refrigerator door to reach the
freezer with this model.)
- three to four months in a freezer that is part of a refrigerator
unit but has a separate door.
- six (or more) months in a separate, 0° F "deep" freezer.
- To transport refrigerated or frozen milk, place it in an
insulated bag or cooler with a cool pack. The farther you live from the
NICU, the more likely it is that you will have to pad the inside of the
cooler with extra cold packs to keep frozen milk from thawing.
Thawing breast milk:The following are general guidelines for thawing frozen milk:
- The oldest milk should be used first, unless recently expressed milk
is recommended.
- Thaw breast milk by placing the collection container in the
refrigerator. It thaws more quickly when held under warm running water
or if it is placed in a cup, pot, bowl, or basin of warm water.
- Do not thaw breast milk at room temperature, in very hot water, or
in the microwave. Microwaving can create hot spots. Both microwaving and
heating in very hot water may decrease the amount of certain
anti-infective properties in the milk.
- Your milk separates during storage and the cream rises to the top,
because breast milk is not homogenized. Gently swirl, or rotate, the
collection bottle of milk to mix it together. Avoid vigorous shaking.
- Do not refreeze milk once it has been thawed. Thawed milk must be
used within 24 hours for a baby in the NICU. (It is safe to give milk
that has been thawed for 24 to 48 hours after the baby is home.)
Taking care of your breast pump and collection kit:It is important to maintain the breast pump and collection kit in good
working order:
- Read the instruction manual and follow the recommendations for
cleaning pump equipment, unless given special guidelines by the NICU.
- The pieces of the collection kit come apart for individual cleaning.
- The pump itself and the tubing portion of the kit do not have to be
cleaned, and they should remain dry or they will not work appropriately.
(These pieces of equipment never come in contact with milk that is to be
stored for the baby.)
- After each use, rinse all parts that come in contact with the breast
or milk in cool water first. (A cool rinse removes residual milk without
coagulating hard-to-clean protein.) Then thoroughly clean these same
parts in hot, soapy water. Rinse in hot water, and air dry between each
use.
- Most manufacturers recommend boiling/sterilizing all parts that come
in contact with the breast or milk once a day. (Check the instruction
manual.)
Do not use a dishwasher to clean or sterilize the parts that come in
contact with the breast or milk unless you have received permission from
the NICU and the instruction manual suggests this method as an option.
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