The New Zealand Herald

Mum pleads for donor milk for baby after heart attack

Support page set up to help feed Hine after rush of offers lost on Facebook

- Ryan Dunlop

Amother is making a desperate plea for donations of breast milk from her hospital bed after she was floored by two heart attacks that have left her unable to feed her baby.

Melissa Crockett-Joyoue and her 8-month-old baby, Hinema¯ rie, are staying at Auckland City Hospital and they’re in trouble.

Crockett-Joyoue is running low on donor milk for Hine, who has food protein induced enterocoli­tis syndrome (FPIES).

“We need milk that is 100 per cent absolutely free of all traces of dairy and eggs, preferably antibiotic free too,” the desperate mum says.

“She cannot drink dairy, goat, sheep, buffalo, soy, rice, oat milk or formula containing that. She has an allergy formula but won’t drink it.”

Crockett-Joyoue had been exclusivel­y breastfeed­ing Hine, on a restricted diet, until three weeks ago when she had a heart attack linked to a rare heart condition.

“On November 15 I was at home and I had a heart attack I should not have survived.”

The heart attack was a rare cardiac event called spontaneou­s coronary artery dissection.

“I’ve been on drugs ever since that weren’t okay for breastfeed­ing and also I have to lower my postpartum hormones as they have contribute­d to my rare heart condition.”

Now she is expecting to have bypass surgery next week which would mean she cannot breastfeed for at least a further three weeks.

“We went through my freezer stash of frozen expressed milk in the first week of my hospital stay, and have managed to scrape together donor milk from other allergy mums on the same restricted diet so far, but this is very tricky.”

Based in Leigh, near Warkworth, the family had been couriering milk from around the country, but with Hine’s strict requiremen­ts, and needing 1000ml a day, it was becoming a near-impossible task.

So on Friday at 11pm, before Crockett-Joyoue went to bed, she made a Facebook post calling for help.

The post had been shared thousands of times , which created a new

So far our best bet has been with other allergy mums . . . and also vegan mums who don’t eat dairy or eggs. Melissa Crockett-Joyoue, mother

problem.

“We’ve had a huge response to our request for donor milk through the various Facebook pages, but almost no one has any milk available now, so we’ve run out as at today.

“The problem for me is Facebook, the comments are disappeari­ng and going into threads, and pictures and when it’s shared on a closed page they don’t know that I can’t see it.”

Now she is directing all offers of help to a new page to make sure no offers of support are lost. That page is Helping Hearts.

“I’m at risk of another heart attack, so have nurse friends and have allergy mums who are helping coordinate some help.

“We are so desperate we are taking it untested and heat treating it.”

Mothers Milk NZ is also helping with the effort and Crockett-Joyoue has encouraged those wanting to help to check the resources on the website to see if they fit the criteria.

Yesterday her mother and father were driving around Auckland trying to get 100ml here and there.

“So far our best bet has been with other allergy mums (who are used to being hyper-vigilant and read all labels etc), and also vegan mums who don’t eat dairy or eggs.”

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? Grandmothe­r Jenny Crockett with Tumanako, 3, mum Melissa Crockett-Joyoue and 8-month-old Hinema¯ rie.
Photo / Supplied Grandmothe­r Jenny Crockett with Tumanako, 3, mum Melissa Crockett-Joyoue and 8-month-old Hinema¯ rie.

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