Mothering › Forums › Pregnancy and Birth › I'm Pregnant › cord blood banking
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:

cord blood banking

post #1 of 35
Thread Starter 
anyone researched this yet? i'm not really sure about it....i've heard it is super costly, and that the public option is cheaper but someone else can use the blood before you may need it.

just curious what other families have decided to do and why....
post #2 of 35
I admit I'm not sure whether all collection companies require this, but the ones around here require early cord clamping (which I guess is logical since they're collecting the blood). I prefer my baby have the cord blood pumped into his body now rather than saving it for possible use later.
post #3 of 35
I researched it with both of my first few, and decided it's just a huge scam.
post #4 of 35
we are doing the cord blood banking...my midwife recommended it, and it is mostly getting paid for through friends/baby shower contributions. my midwife said she doesn't do early cord clamping in order to collect the specimen.
honestly, i didn't do a whole lot of research ahead of time, and just read more about it right now than i did before making my decision...it does seem a little questionable in terms of the money spent vs the chances of it being useful. i suppose i just didn't want to be in a situation where it would be helpful and regret not having done it.
post #5 of 35
We did thorough research and determined that it wasn't for us. For us, the potential benefits simply were too unproven to justify the cost.
post #6 of 35
For us, too, the cost outweighs any potential future benefit (questionable). But I do wonder about donating cord blood - anyone know about that?
If it's not too much of a thread hijack
post #7 of 35
With our second, we donated cord blood. I was going to with our third also, but I had received a blood transfusion 11 months prior to giving birth and they don't allow you to do it within a year. I'm thinking about looking into it again this time and talking with my OB to see if there would be a difference in her procedures for clamping.
post #8 of 35
I wouldn't pay to save it, but I would have donated it if I could but didn't qualify. You have to meet certain criteria, as does dad, just like for regular blood odnation, but my husband had a needle stick injury so couldn't. Also you have to sign up quite early, I think by 30 weeks? I can't quite remember. In a lot of hospitals this blood is drawn out of the cord and saved for 1 week anyways, then it is discarded, so since they are taking it anyways, may as well donate it for something useful, instead of just throwing it away.
In canada you can donate through this:

http://www.acbb.ca/ACBBmain.htm
post #9 of 35
I wondered about this too before we started working with a midwife. But once we learned about delayed cord clamping, it was a no-brainer. I prefer to allow my child to receive all the benefits they can now, rather than pay a lot of money to prevent a possible problem later.
It is my understanding that you have to clamp the cord right away to be able to bank. It is also my understanding that there is a lot of thought these days that clamping the cord right away can actually introduce problems. That's the baby's blood that belongs in their body that you're keeping from them. (That's my understanding anyway...)

Good luck to you!
post #10 of 35
I don't believe it is available where I live yet.. at least it wasn't when I had my last hospital birth almost 5 years ago..
post #11 of 35
Consider the new research that's happening now:

http://www.komonews.com/news/81940967.html

SEATTLE - A major breakthrough in cancer treatment has been by scientists here in Washington.

The Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center cleared a hurdle in the use of umbilical cord blood - using a new life to help save another.

The breakthrough could make umbilical-cord-blood transplants a more widely-used method for treating blood cancers like leukemia.

"I mean it's amazing," says Colleen Delaney of the Fred Hutchison Center.

"You can take someone else's trash - right when a baby is born you give life to that infant - but at the same time you can save the cells from the umbilical cord and give life to someone else who potentially needs a life-saving transplant."

Delaney says researchers have expanded core blood cells before, but they've never seen a significant clinical benefit.

But this time the center got results in an effort to decrease the time patients go without white blood cells.

Delaney says: "I think what this study shows is that we've definitively shown that we can do this - that we can manipulate cells in the laboratory, infuse them in patients and actually see some benefit in terms of early recovery of white cells. We cut the time almost in half of recovery of white blood cells."

Researchers say on average it took 14 days for the transplanted cells to engraft. In the past, it took four weeks using non-expanded units of cord blood.

This time, seven of the 10 patients survived with no evidence of disease.

Ages of the patients involved in the research ranged between 3 and 43. Researchers now plan on more clinical trials - and hope to spread their new findings.

"Very excited," Delaney says. "My patients are really my heroes and this is a tremendous step forward."

So - as one life begins, another could be saved.

Ages of the patients involved in the research ranged between 3 and 43. Researchers now plan on more clinical trials - and hope to spread their new findings.
post #12 of 35
Thread Starter 
yeah this is tough. just wanted some general info before i talk to my midwife about it next week.

i too am 100% committed to delayed clamping, so perhaps that right there eliminates the possibility of banking the blood.

on the other hand, i would be thrilled to donate it if we couldn't afford to store it ourselves.

will continue to research this. thanks ladies

here are two websites on donating:

http://www.cryo-intl.com/enroll/donating/

http://www.marrow.org/HELP/Donate_Co...ood/index.html
post #13 of 35
I banked my son's cord blood....3 years later, I was diagnosed with essential thrombocythemia, which may require a stem cell transplant down the road, so now I'm glad I did!
post #14 of 35
Quote:
Originally Posted by jsh7809 View Post
But I do wonder about donating cord blood - anyone know about that?
If it's not too much of a thread hijack
You have to check with your individual hospital. We're not going to bank the blood (agree with others on the cost vs. benefit), and instead wanted to donate it, but unfortunately our hospital does not participate in cord blood donation (I actually think it is more to do with the state of Maryland...stupid IMO considering how beneficial cord blood can be - someone should be able to use it).
post #15 of 35
We did this with our first and we're doing it with our 2nd too. For me, it's an insurance policy that I hope to never have to use. However, I also feel that I'm supporting research on using cord blood in novel ways. I would have liked to delay cord clamping (even if we hadn't been able to collect the blood), but with an OB, it's not always an option. Ours had even agreed to delay it, and then apparently "forgot". I actually plan on bringing this up with my current OB. I do think it's better to get the benefit of it now, but if that's not possible, I'm fully willing to pay the cost of storing the blood. We did it with CBR, and they do give a discount (or did at least) to military families.
post #16 of 35
does anybody know for sure if whether or not you can delay cord clamping? I want to but it'd be nice to donate... but not if it would be bad for my baby...
post #17 of 35
I asked my midwife about it and she said she does delay cord clamping even when collecting cord blood. So it is possible.
post #18 of 35
I think the private banking option is too expensive, unless you have some reason to think you'll need the blood. *shrug*

We donated my son's cord blood and placenta. We were able to get enough blood, even though we waited until the cord stopped pulsing. I think waiting is a very good idea, since your baby needs its blood - there might not be enough blood if you wait, but sometimes there is. We're planning to donate again with this birth, my kit should arrive tomorrow!

If you're interested in donating, some hospitals do donations, but I think most don't. You can look it up online pretty easily, or ask the hospital. There are two companies that accept donations from anywhere in the US, though, and you can do that even if you're homebirthing! My son's birth was at the Farm, and we successfully donated, even though the courier who comes out to pick up the kit got lost...

The company I use is Lifebank/Celgene, because they're the only ones who take the placenta. I haven't been able to find any information about their donation program online, but if you call their customer service/information number on their website, they'll transfer the call, though they may try to sell you on private banking first. :P The other nation-wide company is cryo-intl.com, I believe.
post #19 of 35
Cord blood donation is available in ANY STATE! Wisconsin does not have their own cord blood bank, however Cryobanks collects the blood and pays for all charges associated with shipping it, etc. PLEASE consider donating your cord blood...my 33 yr old brother in law has leukemia and is a father of 3 young children, they need cord blood and every unit donated is a chance at life for someone else!!! And it costs you NOTHING and can SAVE LIVES! Make a difference instead of trashing it :-D There's really no excuse not to!

Here is the link to donate from ANY state:
http://cryo-intl.com/enroll/donating/
post #20 of 35
FYI...if you donate for FREE your cord blood and it has not been used at the point in time your family needs to use it, they will allow you to have it! This means you have paid NOTHING and have saved the life of one of your children or your family members!!!
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:
  Return Home
  Back to Forum: I'm Pregnant
Mothering › Forums › Pregnancy and Birth › I'm Pregnant › cord blood banking