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Some disadvantages of cord blood banking include the following: Cord blood does not contain many stem cells, which means that adults needing a transplant will require cord blood stem cells from multiple donors. People have to pay a fee for storing cord blood in a private bank, which could prove costly.
Donating cord blood for public use or storing it for your familys private use is a personal decision. You can choose to have your babys cord blood collected and donated to a public cord blood bank, stored in a family (private) cord blood bank or saved for a biological sibling who has a diagnosed medical need.
Cons Cord blood does not contain many stem cells, which means that adults needing a transplant will require cord blood stem cells from multiple donors. People have to pay a fee for storing cord blood in a private bank, which could prove costly. Some hospitals may charge a small fee for a public collection.
Umbilical cord blood contains blood-forming stem cells, which can renew themselves and develop into other types of cells. These stem cells are used in transplants for patients with cancers like leukemia and lymphoma. Cord blood can also help treat over 80 other life-threatening diseases.
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the American Academy of Pediatrics dont recommend routine cord blood storage. The groups say private banks should be used only when theres a sibling with a medical condition who could benefit from the stem cells.
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Physician organizations dont typically recommend storing cord blood as a standard. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) doesnt recommend that parents routinely store their infants umbilical cord blood for future use unless theres an immediate medical need for that blood to be used for a sibling.
Parents Guide to Cord Blood (PGCB) says the median number of total nucleated cells in a 60 mL cord blood collection is 47.0 x 107, or 470 million cells. The minimum accepted public donation is often closer to one billion cells.
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) says that the chance that a child or family member would develop a condition that could be treated with autologous umbilical cord blood is low, and the routine storage of umbilical cord blood as biological insurance against future disease isnt

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