Human breast milk, pasteurized, 4 oz, in bottles; Pasteurized Human Milk,Hospital Grade Milk. Mother's Milk Bank 751 S. Bascom Abe.S...
FDA Recall Notice
Source: U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) — official FDA notice for recall FDA-F-1949-2013.
Human Breast milk was collected from a donor that tested reactive for Hepatitis B in a screening test.
Corrective Action (per FDA)
Source: U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) — official FDA notice for recall FDA-F-1949-2013.
Recall terminated by FDA.
✅ What you should do
- Stop using the product if you own it.
- Check the model number, lot code, or sell-by date against the recall notice above.
- Contact Mothers Milk Bank or the retailer where you bought it for a refund, replacement, or repair.
- For the most current official instructions, visit the FDA recall page.
- If you've been hurt by this product, report the incident to FDA.
Consumer Contact (per FDA)
Source: U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) — official FDA notice for recall FDA-F-1949-2013.
Mothers Milk Bank
About the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
The FDA regulates drugs, medical devices, food, cosmetics, and tobacco. Adverse event reports and recall notices are the main public safety signal.
Visit FDA.gov →📣 Report a food, supplement, or cosmetic problem to the FDA
If you had a reaction, found contamination, or experienced a labeling problem with this product, report it to the FDA. The agency uses consumer reports to track emerging safety signals and trigger recalls.
Mothers Milk Bank Recall FAQ
Mothers Milk Bank is the subject of a dairy safety report: Human breast milk, pasteurized, 4 oz, in bottles; Pasteurized Human Milk,Hospital Grade Milk. Mother's Milk Bank 751 S. Bascom Abe.S.... The notice was published on August 20, 2013 by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Approximately 70 units are potentially affected.