“…Allomaternal nursing, the provisioning of breastfeeding or breastmilk by other women within social groups, is a cross-culturally well-documented cooperative infant care practice, whose cultural significance is varied and context-specific (Cassidy & El-Tom, 2010; Fildes, 1988; Hewlett & Winn, 2014; Shaw, 2004b; Thorley, 2011). While the WHO/UNICEF (World Health Organization, 2003) recognizes cup-feeding of freshly expressed human milk or breastfeeding by another healthy lactating woman, or pasteurized banked donor human milk (if available) as alternatives when a mother’s milk is unavailable or requires supplementation, in the U.S. (along with Canada, Australia, France), medical agencies advise against peer-to-peer breastmilk sharing, citing risks of communicable diseases, exposures to medications and substances, and contamination due to unhygienic storage and handling (Palmquist & Doehler, 2014).…”