Are any of you doing this? And if so which company? I'm having trouble choosing between ViaCord and CBR.
Beautiful Miracle Baby lost at 21 weeks due to pre-term labor and incompetent cervix. FET#1 BFN, FET#2 BFP, early loss. FET#3 BFN. IVF#2 BFFN. FET #4 BFP after removing bilateral hydrosalpinx and 3 months of lupron depot. Sticky Bun is here!!

Re: Cord Blood Banking
Just to give you a bit of a heads up..the cord blood cant be used for the child it comes from-only for siblings etc. Something I never knew about b4 reading into it.
However, parents should know that a child's own cord blood (stored at birth), would rarely be suitable for a transplant today. It could not be used at present to treat genetic diseases, for example, because the cord blood stem cells carry the same affected genes and. if transplanted, would confer the same condition to the recipient. (See the story of Anthony Dones.) In addition, most transplant physicians would not use a child's own cord blood to treat leukemia. There are two reasons why the child?s own cord blood is not safe as a transplant source. First, in most cases of childhood leukemia, cells carrying the leukemic mutation are already present at birth and can be demonstrated in the cord blood. Thus, pre-leukemic cells may be given back with the transplant, since there is no effective way to remove them (purge) today. Second, in a child with leukemia, the immune system has already failed to prevent leukemia. Since cord blood from the same child re-establishes the child's own immune system, doctors fear it would have a poor anti-leukemia effect.
The odds of finding a suitably-matched, publicly-donated, unrelated cord blood unit are already quite high and continue to improve as inventories of public cord blood banks grow.
For these and other reasons, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and many physicians do not recommend private cord blood banking except as ?directed donations? in cases where a family member already has a current need or a very high potential risk of needing a bone marrow transplant. In all other cases, the AAP has declared the use of cord blood as "biological insurance" to be "unwise."
We chose CBR because they also give you the option of saving the actual cord so that you have tissue as well. It doubles the cost, but we are banking both.
We asked Drs but they won't really give you an answer, they just tell you to go on each company's website...
Have you looked into MiracleCord?
we used them before and are doing it again this time. they also give you the option to save the tissue and are more economical. I really enjoyed working with them.
Wow, that's amazing!
Oscar born October 2011
Miscarriage at 8 weeks (August 2013)
DD due September 1, 2014
I actually wanted to do public donation because, if I can't afford to do it privately and benefit from it, at least someone else might. However I found out that the hospital we are delivering out of does not facilitate the harvesting of cordblood for public donation. I plan to ask why at our next tour session (it's a two part-er).
Really? I was told by CBR that it could be used for the baby, myself or any future children (just not DH). Not arguing, just curious as to why I was told something else.
"You have enemies? Good. That means you've stood up for something, sometime in your life."
~ Winston Churchill
My doctor recommended one of the larger companies (ViaCord, CBR) over a smaller company if we were going to bank (we are not). He said that there are a lot of companies popping up that are charging lower fees, but if something should happen, and that smaller company goes under, your cord blood goes with it. You would not be able to transfer your cord blood to another company if the company you have banked with goes under.
We are opting to donate.
Cut out the C&P info since my post will be long, too:
Just to have the other side - here's that info from CBR. A transplant to your baby from its own cord blood is called an autologous transplant. If you read the link below (I'll copy in some of the info - bolded the most important parts), it is correct that autologous transplant isn't appropriate for certain genetic diseases and certain cancers, but it has usefulness and has been used in transplants for other cancers and is being used in experimental trials (more info through Viacord), as I recall. I think those are being done with brain injury, diabetes and cerebral palsy, but I don't have their literature in front of me.
I am a scientist, though I don't work in the lab these days. We'd look into public donation, but we are not a candidate and my hospital does not collect for public banking. Personally, we're leaning towards Viacord over CBR. Perkin Elmer is a VERY well funded company and Viacord is part of Perkin Elmer. Their information regarding their ongoing research was also much more impressive. In addition, Viacord has the ability to expand the original cord blood sample to make enough (potentially) for an adult transplant.
https://www.cordblood.com/cord_blood_banking_with_cbr/common_misconceptions/index.asp
The company I posted about sends your cord blood to a third party lab. it is safe and sound there.