Pumping tips
Time to read: 3 min.
Read our essential guide to cleaning and sanitising breast pump equipment to ensure your expressed breast milk is safe for your baby
When you can’t feed your baby directly, expressed breast milk is simply the best food to give to your baby. Learning when and how to clean and sanitise breast pump parts between uses is vital to ensure your milk is safe to drink. The good news is, if you master the basics of cleaning and sanitising your pumping equipment, your milk should be safe to keep in the fridge for up to five days or in the freezer for up to nine months – see our guide to storing, freezing and thawing breast milk for more advice.
All the parts of your breast pump that come into contact with your breasts or breast milk must be completely clean and dry (see below). But it’s not just your equipment that needs to be clean when expressing milk – so do you! Before every pumping session, remember to wash your hands thoroughly with soap for at least 20 seconds, then rinse them and dry with a clean towel. There’s no need to wash your breasts, unless they have cream or cosmetics on them that aren’t compatible with breastfeeding1 – if in doubt, check the packaging. Many lanolin-based nipple creams are fine to leave on while you express.
After you’ve expressed, always wash any pumping equipment, such as bottles, valves and breast shields, that have touched your breasts or milk and then dry thoroughly so they’re ready for your next session.
At least once a day, you’ll need to sanitise your pumping parts after washing them. You’ll also need to do this if your breast pump equipment is brand new or hasn’t been used for a while.
Sanitising means that the equipment has been thoroughly cleaned of germs and bacteria. You may often hear people talking about ‘sterilising’ baby equipment or see products advertised as ‘sterilisers’, but sanitising is a more accurate term. It is impossible to completely sterilise equipment at home, even if you boil it, as our homes are not totally sterile environments. But sanitising ensures equipment is perfectly safe for you and your baby.
Every product is different, so make sure you follow the sanitising method recommended by your pump manufacturer, but generally you’ll probably use one of these methods:
Once you’ve sanitised your breast pump equipment, allow to dry off thoroughly before use:
Washing your pumping equipment after use, and sanitising it thoroughly at least once a day, will ensure your breast milk is safe to store for your baby.
1 US Food & Drug Administration. Using a breast pump. [Internet]. Silver Spring, MD, USA: US Department of Health and Human Services; 2018 [updated 2018 Feb 04; cited 2018 Apr 12]. Available from: www.fda.gov/MedicalDevices/ProductsandMedicalProcedures/HomeHealthandConsumer/ConsumerProducts/BreastPumps/ucm061944.htm
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