Just running into this thread now.
I'm an International Board Certified Lactation Consultant, and this case - like others similar - DOES have ground for a successful suit and is causing considerable discussion among health care professionals who hate to hear of any situation in which a breastfeeding mother is put into an embarrassing situation.
The idea of tasting human milk should NOT be repugnant. After all, it "is" fit for human consumption.
The problem here is that we have not heard of any cases where mothers with bottles of non-human milk were told to "take a taste". If all bottles of whatever concoction are also to be "tasted" when traveling through security, then I agree reluctantly that human milk in bottles should have to go through the same security measures.
Incidently, the cost of a prescription of human milk from a milk bank is currently $4.00/ounce. That's a precious commodity to dump for an unnecessary reason. Interestingly, many ounces of banked frozen human milk are daily flown across the country for sick babies and older babies and children who have medical conditions that make it impossible for them to survive on anything other than human milk. I sincerely hope that security issues will not make this difficult in the future.
Ruth
I'm an International Board Certified Lactation Consultant, and this case - like others similar - DOES have ground for a successful suit and is causing considerable discussion among health care professionals who hate to hear of any situation in which a breastfeeding mother is put into an embarrassing situation.
The idea of tasting human milk should NOT be repugnant. After all, it "is" fit for human consumption.

The problem here is that we have not heard of any cases where mothers with bottles of non-human milk were told to "take a taste". If all bottles of whatever concoction are also to be "tasted" when traveling through security, then I agree reluctantly that human milk in bottles should have to go through the same security measures.
Incidently, the cost of a prescription of human milk from a milk bank is currently $4.00/ounce. That's a precious commodity to dump for an unnecessary reason. Interestingly, many ounces of banked frozen human milk are daily flown across the country for sick babies and older babies and children who have medical conditions that make it impossible for them to survive on anything other than human milk. I sincerely hope that security issues will not make this difficult in the future.
Ruth