Your Walking Medicine Chest
By Liz Laing
Issue 133, November/December 2005
Mother's milk is the perfect panacea for a whole host of ailments - from pinkeye to acne. Just a squirt will do the trick!
Most
people know about the health benefits of breastfeeding, but few know
about breastmilk's medicinal benefits. Breastmilk is sterile,
antibacterial, and has many healing properties. It can be used to treat
a variety of ailments and can be applied topically for eye and ear
infections, minor skin injuries, sore or cracked nipples, diaper rash,
sore throats, and stuffy noses. Is breastmilk an everyday cure-all?
Read on and judge for yourself.
When your child gets a cold and
has a stuffy nose, drizzle breastmilk into each nostril. It will thin
the mucus, and the milk's natural antibodies will help fight infection.
Jay Gordon, MD, FAAP, IBCLC's nationally recognized pediatrician,
author, and breastfeeding authority, encourages the use of breastmilk
in this way. "I recommend breastmilk as the best nose drop for babies
and children with colds," he says. "The milk kills viruses on contact
(sounds like a TV commercial!), and the best part is that it makes
babies sneeze. The sneeze sends viruses, bacteria, dust, and more
flying out of the nose at 100 mph."
Several clinical studies
have shown that since each mother's milk is made specifically for her
own baby, it is effective in ridding the infant's eyes and nose of
viruses and germs. I have used it on my own children, and even on
myself. Recently, my son had pinkeye; when I applied my breastmilk to
his eyes several times a day, the conjunctivitis cleared up. A friend
of mine used her breastmilk on all her family members whenever they got
pinkeye, and thus for years she was able to avoid having to buy
prescription eyedrops.
You never know when breastmilk will come
in handy. I got liquid soap in my eye once while in the locker room at
my gym. My eye was burning and extremely red, and rinsing it with water
didn't help at all. I checked my purse for eyedrops but found none.
Then I remembered the built-in medicine chest I carried around on my
own chest. I went into a bathroom stall, cupped my hand, squirted out
some milk, and bathed my eye in it. Ahhhhhh! Instant relief - the
redness and painful stinging were gone. I was glad to have this option
available, and felt proud that my body produces something that can be
used to help heal other parts of my body. What a great way to recycle.
Besides
colds and eye irritations, there are several other conditions that
might benefit from the use of breastmilk. In most cases you simply
express your milk into a clean saucer, cup, or bowl, then use a cotton
ball or eyedropper to apply or squirt milk directly onto the area, as
needed, for the desired results.
In many places - including
Mexico, Russia, Africa, South America, and India - the use of
breastmilk in alternative ways is quite common. One mother on a
Midwifery Today online forum said, "In Nigeria, if a child has a
condition of the eyes, such as mucus, we simply squirt a bit of
breastmilk and it clears right up."1
Besides healing common
minor afflictions, breastmilk has recently been in the news for helping
to treat more serious illnesses. Adult cancer patients have been
drinking breastmilk in an attempt to boost their immune systems and
cope better with the side effects of chemotherapy.2 While this is not a
common practice, a milk bank in California has supplied a group of
pioneering patients with breastmilk for the past few years. One lucky
recipient of this donor milk, Howard Cohen of Palo Alto, California,
strongly believes that ingesting breastmilk daily has helped his
prostate cancer go into remission.3
Donor milk is used to treat
a variety of health problems. I spoke with Pauline Sakamoto, RN, MS,
executive director of the Mothers' Milk Bank in San Jose, California,
about some of the other ways breastmilk benefits people. "Historically,
human milk has been used for diseases and health conditions of adults
and children and as a superior food for babies. These folk cures have
been tested throughout time. Currently, there has been more interest in
the scientific community to test the components of human milk's effect
on different health problems that plague us today. Hopefully, in the
near future, we will validate the incredible power that our body has to
promote growth, heal itself, and preserve its integrity via human milk.
Breastmilk
may even kill cancer cells. In 1995 physician and immunologist
Catharina Svanborg and a team of research biologists at Sweden's Lund
University discovered in breastmilk a protein compound,
alpha-lactalbumin (they gave it the acronym HAMLET), that selectively
induces apoptosis in tumor cells.4 In other words, HAMLET makes cancer
cells commit suicide. In fact, it has killed every type of cancer the
researchers have tested it against. HAMLET has also been used to
successfully treat virally infected warts, which were reduced by 75
percent in volunteers who received daily treatments with an ointment
containing the protein. The same viruses that cause warts are also
linked to cervical cancer, genital warts, and some types of skin
cancer. Well, we all knew that breastmilk is powerful.
You may
wonder why this discovery of a possible cure for cancer has not
received greater attention. Funding is part of the problem, but slowly,
in the past decade, more attention has been paid to this small
laboratory in a quiet corner of the world. Even the American Cancer
Society has given its stamp of approval by giving a grant to Svanborg
and her team to help fund further research into their discovery.
While
this type of scientific news is exciting, let's not forget the real
miracle of breastmilk and its primary use. The healing powers of this
liquid gold are incredible enough, but breastmilk's most amazing
quality is that it gives life. No other food or substance on earth
comes close to doing what breastmilk does. Human breastmilk is the
ideal food for human babies. Pediatrician Jay Gordon reminds us how
crucial breastfeeding is when he says, "Babies denied breastmilk during
the first year of life get sick and die at a much greater rate than
babies who nurse."
I am still amazed when I watch my son nurse.
I know that his healthy, growing body is thriving because he is
suckling the perfect food, which my body makes for his body. But in
addition to satisfying this primary need, my breastmilk can help heal
his body in other ways as well.
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Try doing that with formula! Great post.