Find clinic locations for Fort HealthCare and affiliated clinics and services in Jefferson County, Wisconsin.
Find services offered by Fort HealthCare and affiliated clinics in Jefferson County, Wisconsin.
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The following are general guidelines for collecting and storing breast milk when using a hospital-grade electric breast pump. If the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) gives you more specific instructions, follow their recommendations.
Before you begin to pump, read the instruction manual for the breast pump and collection kit you are using.
Breast milk is not sterile, but you do not want to introduce "outside" bacteria when getting ready to pump, during pumping, or when storing milk or transporting it to the NICU.
You may have to try different methods and settings on the breast pump before you find ones that work best for you. The following are some general tips:
If you pumped both breasts at once and the total amount of milk will fill one bottle no more than two-thirds full, you may combine the contents in one bottle by carefully pouring the milk from one sterile container into the other. Don't combine milk from different pumping sessions when pumping for a high-risk baby.
Labels should include the baby's name, the date, the time of day pumped, and any medicines or substances, such as cigarette byproducts, that you have taken or been exposed to since the last pumping session.
Frozen breast milk may be kept:
Place it in an insulated bag or cooler with a cool pack. Breast milk can be stored in an insulated cooler with frozen ice packs for up to 24 hours. 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.
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.
The following are general guidelines for thawing frozen milk:
It is important to maintain the breast pump and collection kit in good working order:
Don't 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 a choice.