Fort McMurray moms donating breast milk to families in need, babies in NICU - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 08:39 PM | Calgary | -11.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Edmonton

Fort McMurray moms donating breast milk to families in need, babies in NICU

Fort McMurray moms are donating breast milk to make sure babies across Alberta, in NICUs and at home, have enough to drink. Its a practice that has been gaining popularity across Alberta for the last 10 years.

NorthernStar Mothers Milk Bank has milk drop in Fort McMurray, other Alberta cities

Cole Doyle, Kristina Landry's son, seated next to her latest donation of breast milk. (Submitted by Kristina Landry)

Fort McMurraymoms are stepping up to donate breast milk through an Alberta-based charity and helping to ensure babies across Alberta, in NICUs and at home, have enough to drink.

The mothers are donating through NorthernStar Mothers Milk Bank, which is based in Calgary but has a donation location, or milk drop, in Fort McMurray, along with several other places in the province.

Kristina Landry, mother of two, started donating breast milk when her youngest was twomonths old. She has donated about 50 litres to the milk bank and another almost 44 litres directly to Fort McMurray moms.

Landry amassed a freezer full of extra breast milk, much more than her baby could drink.

She didn't want to throw the milk away, and then she heard about the milk bank.

"It's very rewarding. I love it," said Landry.

Kristina Landry and her son Cole Doyle in front of Landry's freezer stash of breast milk. (Jamie Malbeuf/CBC)

The milk goes to mothers who are struggling to produce, or to be used at hospitals across Canada in aneonatal intensive care unit (NICU).

Jannette Festival, executive director and co-founder of Calgary-basedNorthernStar Mothers Milk Bank, said every year the milk bank is growing.

In its first year, 2012, itdispensed more than 1,700litresof milk, and so far this year it's been nearly 7,400 litres.

"Parents are quite happybecause they know they have a choice on how they feed their baby," Festival said.

She noted that the number of donors inFort McMurraydropped to a low of six in 2019, but there are18 already this year.

"One donor can make such an impact," she said.

Mel Hargrove, a mother of two, started donating this year.

"My freezer stock just went crazy and my kid doesn't take bottles," said Hargrove.

"These babies that are getting the milk in the NICU are so immunocompromised and they need all of the help they can get," she said."If the antibodies from my breast milk [are]going to help just one baby, then that in itself makes me happy enough to do it."

Hargrove has also donated milk directly to moms in Fort McMurray to help them top up their milk supplies and feed their babies.

"You actually get to have a face-to-face interaction with them and it made that transaction a little more beautiful," she said.

Jasmine Armstrong, a mother of three, breastfed her first two children,but caught COVID-19when her daughter was two months old.

She stopped breastfeeding for two days while she was sick, and her milk supply stopped. To make things worse, her daughter refused formula.

"I kind of panicked," said Armstrong.

Cole Doyle surrounded by the milk he is sharing with babies in Alberta's hospitals. (Submitted by Kristina Landry)

Through social media, she found moms who had extra milk they were looking to share with others.

The women she got donations from were also donating to the NorthernStar Mothers Milk Bank, so Armstrong felt the milk was safe.

"It was pretty much a miracle for me," said Armstrong.

The support she received from the community kept her baby fed and happy, and now her daughter is her "thickest baby," she said.

"I just remember picking up the milk and bawling in the vehicle and having to gain my composure in order to drive home."