Breast milk needed to fill shelves at B.C. Women's Provincial Milk Bank

Clio Wu was first able to hold her son, Adam, a week after he was born prematurely at 29 weeks.

"And he was only 2½ pounds when he was born, so that human milk is very much needed," said Wu, who was not able to produce any breast milk at the time.

So for the first month of Adam's life, Wu chose to rely on breast milk donated from other mothers to B.C. Women's Provincial Milk Bank.

"I definitely feel like it is a blessing for me and my baby," said Wu.

Adam is now eight months old, happy, healthy and ready to crawl. Wu says she plans to give back to the milk bank by donating her own breast milk, which she is now able to produce.

"I didn't even hesitate," she said. "Definitely my son being a recipient from donors' milk, it made it more meaningful for our personal life."

Unfortunately, not all premature or critically-ill babies are getting the breast milk their parents and care-providers want for them because the milk bank is not receiving enough donations.

Watch as Frances Jones shows the CBC's Tina Lovgreen all the empty shelves at the B.C. Women's Provincial Milk Bank:

"We are not meeting all requests," said Jones.

"We are having to tell families that we can't, particularly out patients, that we cannot provide donor milk, because we just don't have it."

Currently the bank has about 4,000 ounces of milk stored in its refrigerators. That amount will be used up in one week.

Jones says she would like to have up to 30,000 ounces on hand to meet demand province-wide, which has been on the rise since the bank began serving all of the province's 13 neonatal intensive care units.

With files fromTina Lovgreen.