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Breastfeeding
What To Do If An Infant Or Child
Is Mistakenly Fed Another Woman’s Expressed Breast Milk
If a child has been mistakenly fed another child’s bottle of
expressed breast milk, the possible exposure to HIV or other infectious
diseases should be treated just as if an accidental exposure to other
body fluids had occurred.
The provider should
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Inform the mother who expressed the breast milk of the bottle
switch, and ask
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When the breast milk was expressed and how it was handled prior
to being delivered to the caretaker or facility
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Whether she has ever had an HIV test and, if so, would she be
willing to share the results with the parents of the child given the
incorrect milk
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If she does not know whether she has ever been tested for HIV,
would she be willing to contact her physician and find out if she
has been tested
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If she has never been tested for HIV, would she be willing to
have one and share the results with the parents of the other child
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Discuss the mistaken milk with the parents of the child who was
given the wrong bottle
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Inform them that their child was given another child’s bottle of
expressed breast milk
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Inform them that the risk of transmission of HIV is very small
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Encourage the parents to notify the child’s physician of the
exposure
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Provide the family with information on when the milk was
expressed and how the milk was handled prior to its being delivered
to the caretaker so that the parents may inform their own physician
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Inform the parents that their child should soon undergo a
baseline test for HIV
The risk of HIV transmission from expressed breast milk consumed by
another child is believed to be low because
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In the United States, women who are HIV positive and aware of that
fact are advised NOT to breastfeed their infants
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Chemicals present in breast milk act, together with time and cold
temperatures, to destroy the HIV present in expressed breast milk
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Transmission of HIV from single breast milk exposure has never been
documented
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