Bill

Bill > A3038


NJ A3038

NJ A3038
Establishes public awareness campaign advising pregnant women, new parents, and women who are breast feeding about dangers of casual milk sharing.


summary

Introduced
02/20/2020
In Committee
02/20/2020
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
01/11/2022

Introduced Session

2020-2021 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill requires the Commissioner of Health to establish a public awareness campaign to advise pregnant women, new parents, and women who are breast feeding their children about the dangers of casual milk sharing. As defined in the bill, "casual milk sharing" is an informal arrangement in which a mother donates human breast milk that has not been collected, processed, stored, distributed, or sold by a human milk bank to a parent who is unable to nurse, or is in need of additional breast milk to feed, the parent's child. The bill also defines "human milk bank" as an organized service for the selection of a donor and the collection, processing, storage, distribution, or sale of donated human breast milk to a hospital for use by low birth weight babies or new mothers with delayed lactation, or directly to a parent, with a physician's prescription order, who is unable to nurse, or is in need of additional breast milk to feed, the parent's child. Under the provisions of the bill, the campaign would, at a minimum, provide information on: risk factors associated with casual milk sharing, including disease transmission and contamination from drugs, germs, or chemicals; the federal Food and Drug Administration's warning against mothers using donated breast milk obtained directly from individuals or other unknown sources; and human milk banks and the procedures they use to select donors and collect, process, store, dispense, or sell donated breast milk. The commissioner would be required to: develop printed materials about casual milk sharing in English, Spanish, and any other language that the commissioner determines is the first language of a significant number of citizens in the State; disseminate information on the dangers of casual milk sharing for distribution to pregnant women, new parents, and women who are breast feeding their children through entities, including, but not limited to, local health agencies and clinics, physicians, health care facilities, pharmacies, libraries, community-based outreach programs and organizations, and the Department of Health Internet site; and report to the Governor and the Legislature, no later than 18 months after the effective date of bill, on the activities and accomplishments of the public awareness campaign.

AI Summary

This bill requires the Commissioner of Health to establish a public awareness campaign to advise pregnant women, new parents, and women who are breastfeeding about the dangers of "casual milk sharing," which refers to an informal arrangement where a mother directly donates human breast milk that has not been processed by a milk bank. The campaign would provide information on the risk factors associated with casual milk sharing, including disease transmission and contamination, the FDA's warning against using donated breast milk from unknown sources, and the procedures used by human milk banks to select donors and process breast milk. The Commissioner would be required to develop educational materials in multiple languages, disseminate information through various entities, and report on the campaign's activities and accomplishments within 18 months.

Committee Categories

Education

Sponsors (2)

Last Action

Introduced, Referred to Assembly Women and Children Committee (on 02/20/2020)

bill text


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