Sunday, December 13, 2009
Cancer Mum In Baby Milk Plea
Cancer mum in baby milk plea
Sue Carr
December 10, 2009
A YOUNG mum who was diagnosed with breast cancer while pregnant is appealing against a decision to stop giving donated breast milk to her premature baby.
Dawn Hockey, 28, was 12 weeks pregnant with her second child when she received the devastating news in June this year.
Defying the odds and surviving two bouts of chemotherapy, baby Alex was born on 1 November – seven weeks early – weighing 4lbs 10oz.
But although Dawn – who is unable to breastfeed until she has finished her treatment – claims medics agreed to provide donor milk until she could feed Alex herself, Stepping Hill Hospital has now refused, claiming it is no longer necessary.
Dawn, who lives with husband Michael, 15-month-old William and Alex at North Road, Glossop, also underwent a single mastectomy while pregnant and is currently halfway through chemotherapy.
She said: "When I was diagnosed the first response from my surgeon was to terminate, but after having three lots of surgery for endometriosis so I could have my children in the first place, there was no way they were taking this baby off me as well.
"I had to stop breastfeeding William which was heartbreaking enough and the agreement was that Alex could be on donated breast milk until I could take over when I finish my treatment in April.
"I can’t feed him, not while I’m on chemotherapy.
"He has been exposed to two doses of chemotherapy in the womb, we don’t know what damage that has done to him, and there are things in breast milk that strengthen your immune system, not in formula.
"This is our argument, this is what he needs."
Although Dawn’s address means she should be under Tameside and Glossop PCT, she has been treated at Stockport’s Stepping Hill Hospital in the past and is still in their care. She recently transferred to Tameside Hospital – which supports her case – but is waiting for a report from her new paediatrician and says for now all she can do is appeal.
She added: "Donor milk is more often than not used for women who can’t establish breastfeeding straight away. Tha’s all I am doing, it’s just that I can’t establish breastfeeding for a lot longer. Why should we be penalised because I physically can’t breastfeed him? It breaks my heart that I can’t and donor milk is the next best thing."
Stepping Hill’s chief executive Chris Burke said: "There is evidence that for sick or extremely premature babies, donor breast milk is of benefit as the first few weeks of life are critical for development of the immune system.
"However, there is no evidence that there is any benefit in giving donor breast milk to other groups of babies and North West guidelines do not recommend using donor milk for babies over 29 weeks’ gestation.
"Dawn’s baby was born at 32 weeks’ gestation and therefore there was no clinical reason to continue to provide donor breast milk to a healthy baby which in itself has inherent risks of transmission of infection."
Tameside Hospital chiefs say they support Dawn who also has letters of support from the World Health Organisation, Unicef, two GPs and her oncologist.
A spokesman for Tameside and Glossop PCT, which will make the final decision, said: "The baby has now been transferred to another paediatrician and we have requested a report outlining the need to continue on donor breast milk.
"We continue to provide this milk while it awaits the information requested and will continue to provide the milk if advised this is in the best interests of the child."
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