Because what is in your breast milk changes as your baby
develops, it is best to use milk as soon as possible after pumping or
expressing it. Also, the antioxidant and other protective properties are most
important and beneficial to your baby when breast milk is fresh. The protective
components of breast milk decrease with refrigeration and freezing.1 However, stored breast milk is the next best thing to fresh
breast milk as a complete and nutritious food source for your baby. Stored
breast milk is still better for your baby than formula.
Although
fresh breast milk is best, the milk can be stored and then used in the
following ways:
- Kept at room temperature for 4
hours.
- Kept fresh in a cooler with blue ice [59°F (15°C)] for 24
hours.
- Stored fresh in the refrigerator [39°F (3.9°C)] for 3 days.
- Kept in a
refrigerator freezer [4°F (-15.6°C)] for up to 3 months.
- Frozen in a separate deep freezer
[4°F (-15.6°C)] for up to 6
months.
Milk from both breasts expressed during the same session can
be combined in one container. It is best to use a container that holds enough
milk for one feeding. You are less likely to have to discard unused milk.
Storage containers should be clean and dry. They do not need to be sterile.
Plastic bottle liners or small Ziploc bags can be used for storage, held
upright in cups. Store milk at the back of the refrigerator or freezer
compartment for the most consistent temperature control.
Do not:
- Refreeze thawed milk.
- Use thawed
(and then refrigerated) breast milk after 24 hours.
- Use a microwave
oven for warming milk. Microwaves heat unevenly, creating hot spots that can
burn your baby's mouth and throat.
Frozen breast milk will separate because the fat floats to
the top. This separation is normal and does not mean that the milk has spoiled
or is otherwise unusable. After thawing breast milk, shake the container gently
and the fat will redistribute evenly.
When thawing or warming
breast milk, run warm water over the storage container (which may be a bottle
or a plastic bag) until the milk becomes slushy. You can then heat the
container gently in a pot of warm water on the stove until the milk is slightly
warm to the touch.
Some people are concerned about bisphenol A
(BPA), a chemical in some plastic (polycarbonate) bottles. Research hasn't
shown that small amounts of BPA harm humans, but researchers are doing more
studies. If you don't want to use this type of baby bottle (which may be marked
with the number 7 or the letters "PC" near the recycle symbol), you can use
glass or BPA-free plastic bottles.