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Donate Milk

We appreciate your interest in donating your extra milk to the Minnesota Milk Bank for Babies. Your donations allow our non-profit organization to provide safe pasteurized donor human milk to premature and medically fragile infants in Minnesota and the Upper Midwest.

There is a high demand for milk donors and every drop of your precious milk counts!

Donor Requirements

 

To ensure the safety of the milk, there are certain qualifications to meet in order to become an approved milk donor. Our milk donors are:

  • In good health
  • Collecting extra breastmilk beyond what their baby needs or milk that cannot be used by their baby
  • Not using tobacco products
  • Not using CBD oil, marijuana, or recreational drugs
  • Not drinking alcohol daily
  • Willing to donate a minimum of 150 oz. of frozen milk (if donating after an infant loss, any amount is welcome)
  • Only taking medications that are approved and safe for milk donation
  • At low risk, along with their sexual partner(s), for HIV/AIDS and other communicable diseases (e.g. hepatitis B or C, or syphilis)

We accept breast milk stored in the freezer for up to 8 months since the pump date.

We cannot accept breast milk pumped after baby’s first birthday.

More questions?  

Please contact us at donatemilk@mnmilkbank.org or at 763-290-1865.

How To Become a Donor

Interest Form

Fill out form to
express interest

Health History

Complete a medical questionnaire and forms

Blood Draw

Take a blood test
(no cost to you)

Donate Milk

Drop off milk at
a depot or ship
for free

Ready to get started?

 

Outlined below is our screening process which takes about 3-6 weeks to complete. We cannot accept or hold milk donations until you are an approved donor (except for parents who have experienced an infant loss).

  1. Submit an online donor interest form and schedule a phone screening. During this confidential interview, we will discuss your health history, including medications, illnesses, and risk of exposure to bloodborne pathogens. Please be prepared to share all medications taken since the birth of your baby as some medications may impact your ability to donate.
  2. Complete the online application and consent forms. With your permission, we will contact your healthcare provider to confirm that becoming a milk donor is the right choice for you.
  3. Visit a nearby lab for a one-time blood draw. The Milk Bank will pay for the blood draw and test expenses. The screening will be done for HIV, HTLV, syphilis, and hepatitis B & C.
  4. When approved, drop off frozen milk at a depot near you. If you do not live close to a depot, we will work with you to coordinate best way to transport your frozen milk to the Milk Bank free of charge.
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