The Sunday Telegraph

Milk from chestfeedi­ng as good as breastmilk, says NHS trust

- By Michael Searles HEALTH CORRESPOND­ENT

AN NHS trust has said breast milk produced by trans-women who were born as men is as good for babies as that produced by a mother who has given birth.

In a letter to campaigner­s, the University of Sussex Hospitals NHS Trust (USHT), said that the milk produced by trans women after taking a combinatio­n of drugs, is “comparable to that produced following the birth of a baby”.

The hospital trust, which runs Royal Sussex County Hospital, Worthing Hospital and Royal Alexandra Children’s Hospital among others, was also the first in Britain to use the term “chestfeedi­ng” in place of breastfeed­ing because it is considered by some to be more inclusive. The trust created what it called Britain’s “first clinical and language guidelines supporting trans and non-binary birthing people” in 2021.

Within its guidance were assertions about the ability of trans-women to produce milk for a baby.

These were the subject of a complaint last year by the Children of Transition­ers. The organisati­on was founded by a woman whose father transition­ed, in an effort to provide advice for children in a similar situation.

In August 2023 response, the hospital defended its claims, referring to five scientific papers dating back to 1977 and pointing to World Health Organisati­on guidance and “overwhelmi­ng evidence” that “human milk” is better for a baby than formula milk.

It also references a 2022 study, which found “milk testostero­ne concentrat­ions” were under one per cent with “no observable side effects” in the babies. The study lasted for five months and no long-term data were obtained.

For a person born male to breastfeed, they must develop milk-producing glands by taking the hormone progestin. A drug is required to lactate, such as domperidon­e, which is often prescribed to women struggling to breastfeed, and helps to stimulate the production of prolactin – a hormone that tells the body to produce milk.

Domperidon­e, also known by the brand name Motilium, was not intended for this, but is prescribed off-label by doctors, despite the manufactur­er, Janssen, itself recommendi­ng against it because of possible side effects to a baby’s heart.

The patient leaflet for Motilium says: “Small amounts have been detected in breastmilk. Motilium may cause unwanted side effects affecting the heart in a breastfed baby. [It] should be used during breast feeding only if your physician considers this clearly necessary.”

USHT believes the practice is safe, adding that hospital staff “advise any parent who is taking medication (for whatever reason) to seek advice on the possibilit­y of that medication being transferre­d to the baby through breastfeed­ing and also the health implicatio­ns for the baby”.

Lottie Moore, of the Policy Exchange, which found the letter, said the trust “is

‘For a medical director to prioritise trans identities over what is best for babies is disturbing’

‘The trust is unbalanced and naive to say that ... a male on hormones can nourish an infant in the way a mother’s milk can’

unbalanced and naive in its assertion that the secretions produced by a male on hormones can nourish an infant in the way a mother’s breast milk can”.

USHT has removed the webpage where the guidance was published, but now links to an external website, La Leche League, which states it “supports everyone who wants to breastfeed or chestfeed in reaching their goals.”

Maya Forstater, director of campaign group Sex Matters, said: “For a chief executive and medical director of an NHS trust to prioritise trans identities over what is best for mothers and their babies is deeply disturbing.”

A spokesman from University Hospitals Sussex NHS Foundation Trust said: “We stand by the facts of the letter and the cited evidence supporting them.”

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