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Bubba Bump

Breast Ice & Heat Packs β€” Engorgement & Mastitis Relief

  • Use as an ice pack to alleviate pain and inflammation caused by engorgement, mastitis, blocked ducts, and other breast-related discomfort
  • Use as a heat pack before breastfeeding or expressing to ease blocked ducts and stimulate lactation reflex and milk flow
$39.99 AUD

Only, 2 items are in stock!

Order within the next 23 hours 11 minutes to receive it. Estimated delivery is between Monday, 08 Jun and Monday, 15 Jun.

Experience relief from mastitis, engorgement, and blocked milk ducts with our ice and heat breast packs.

Ease pain and reduce inflammation throughout your breastfeeding journey. Experience maximum relief by easily inserting these packs into your bra (nursing or regular), placing them around your breasts, nipples, and breast pump.Β Say farewell to discomfort with our revolutionary ice and heat pack for breasts!

Breast Ice Pack -Β  freeze in the freezer

Improve post-breastfeeding discomfort with this breast ice pack. Utilize cold therapy to alleviate pain and inflammation caused by engorgement, mastitis, blocked ducts, and other breast-related discomfort.Β 

Breast Hot Pack -Β  heat in the microwave or warm water

Utilize this soothing heat pack before breastfeeding or expressing to ease blocked ducts and stimulate lactation reflex and milk flow. Additionally, heat therapy can alleviate breast discomfort and tenderness and prevent mastitis. Our breast gel pads are ideal for warming and aiding in the antenatal expression of colostrum (please consult with your doctor or midwife before doing so).Β 

Alternate Applications for Hot / Cold Breast Pads

Our breast heat and ice packs can provide relief for women recovering from breast surgery, alleviating discomfort, tenderness, and swelling during the post-surgical phase. Additionally, these packs can also aid in soothing the breasts during the process of suppressing breastfeeding.

  • Free shipping for orders over $100 (Australia only)
  • Orders are dispatched within 1-3 business days.
  • All items are located within Australia.
  • You will receive an email confirmation once your order has been dispatchedΒ with your order number and shipping method.
  • If stock needs to be sent from more than one warehouse, you willΒ receive multiple packages with multiple tracking numbers.
  • All intimate products are shipped with discreet packaging.
  • If you require products urgently, please contact us directly to confirm theΒ stock location so that weΒ canΒ endeavor to process and dispatch your order as a priority.

Change of Mind Purchases

Due to the intimate nature of our products,Β we do not accept returns or exchanges forΒ change-of-mind purchases.

The exception for this is SRC Health Products

  • SRC Recovery garments must be returned within 30 days of purchase
  • SRC Non recovery products must be returned within 14 days of purchase
  • All items are required to be returned in their original unworn condition, with their garment tags and labels in place.
  • Shipping costs are non-refundable.
  • To initiate a SRC Health product return, please contact hello@blossompelvichealth.com.au for further instructionsΒ 

Β 

Faulty / Damaged Item

If an itemΒ is faulty or damaged, please contact us immediately at hello@blossompelvichealth.com.au so that we can resolve the issue as soon as possible.Β 

Β 

Incorrect OrderΒ 

If you receive an incorrect order, please contact us immediately at hello@blossompelvichealth.com.au so that we can resolve the issue as soon as possible.

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Breast Ice & Heat Packs Australia: Engorgement, Blocked Ducts & Sore Breasts Answered

Cold therapy between feeds, gentle warmth before. What physios and midwives suggest for engorgement, blocked ducts and tender breasts during breastfeeding.

Breast ice and heat packs are reusable gel packs shaped to sit comfortably around the breast and nipple. They're used for cold therapy between feeds and gentle warmth before a feed or pumping session. The Bubba Bump packs come as a pair, contoured with a cut-out for the nipple, and they slide neatly inside a nursing bra so you can keep going about your day with both hands free.

Most breastfeeding parents reach for them in the first few weeks after birth, when milk supply is still settling in and the breasts feel firm, hot and uncomfortable between feeds. This is commonly called engorgement. A cold pack worn against the breast for short periods between feeds is widely recommended by lactation consultants and midwives to help with that swollen, tender feeling. Warmth, on the other hand, is often used briefly *before* a feed to help the breasts feel softer and less full, which can make latching easier for baby.

The same packs are useful through the months and years of feeding too. They're handy for sore nipples after a tough feed, for tenderness around a blocked duct, after pumping, or when you're night-weaning and your breasts feel uncomfortably full. Some parents continue using the cold packs when they're suppressing supply or during a slow wean, because cool compresses can settle that heavy, sore feeling.

Bubba Bump's breast packs are TGA-listed under ARTG 374111 as a Class I hot/cold therapy pack and shaped specifically for the breast. If you're also looking for cold therapy on the perineum after a vaginal birth, that's a separate product with a different shape: see the dedicated Bubba Bump Perineal Ice & Heat Pack. Buy the one that matches the area you need to cool or warm, rather than trying to make one shape work for both jobs.

Yes. Using a cold pack on engorged breasts is one of the most consistently recommended comfort measures from Australian midwives, lactation consultants and breastfeeding-support organisations. The Australian Breastfeeding Association specifically suggests cool packs *between* feeds to help with the swollen, hot feeling that comes with milk coming in, and a 2024 review in PMC by Alshakhs and colleagues found alternating cold and hot compresses helped reduce engorgement in postnatal mothers.

Engorgement is what happens when the breasts get overly full of milk, blood and lymph fluid all at once. The tissue swells, the skin feels stretched and tight, and the area can ache. Cold therapy helps with the *swelling and tenderness* side of that picture. It doesn't reduce the milk itself, just the surrounding inflammation that's making the breasts feel so uncomfortable. That's why cold is recommended *between* feeds rather than before: cold can make let-down a little harder to trigger if applied right before a feed.

How most people use them: pop the gel pack in the freezer, then apply over the bra (or wrapped in a thin cloth if you're applying directly to skin) for about 15 to 20 minutes between feeds, no more than every 1 to 2 hours. You're not trying to shock the breast. You're aiming for cool and soothing.

A few caveats worth knowing. Engorgement that comes with red streaks, fever, body aches or flu-like symptoms isn't typical engorgement. It can be a sign of mastitis, which needs assessment by a GP, midwife or lactation consultant rather than ice alone. And if engorgement is making it hard for baby to latch, hand-expressing a small amount of milk just before the feed can soften the areola enough to help. A midwife or LC can show you how. Cold packs are part of the toolkit, not the whole answer.

For most engorgement, the short answer is: cold for swelling and tenderness, brief warmth only when needed to soften the breast just before a feed. Cold does the bigger job. Heat is a small, careful add-on, not the main event.

The reason comes down to what each one does to breast tissue. Cold reduces blood flow to the area, which calms the swelling and the ache that comes with engorged breasts. Warmth does the opposite. It increases blood flow, which can actually make swelling worse if you use it too long or right after milk has come in. That's why most lactation consultants recommend cold *between* feeds and only a brief warm compress (a couple of minutes, not 15) right before a feed if your breasts feel so full that baby is struggling to latch.

The Australian Breastfeeding Association's own guidance suggests cool packs between feeds and only short, gentle warmth if it's making latching easier. The same idea sits behind the design of the Bubba Bump packs: one set, two temperatures, used at the right moment for the right purpose.

A few practical patterns physios and midwives often suggest:

- Engorgement after milk first comes in (around day 3 to 5): cold packs between feeds, gentle hand expression to soften before latching.
- Sore, tender breasts later on: cold after the feed for comfort.
- A breast that feels full and lumpy in one spot, with baby finding it hard to drain: brief warmth and gentle massage *before* feeding, then cold afterwards.
- Mastitis symptoms (fever, redness, flu-like feeling): this isn't a cold-vs-hot question. See your GP, midwife or LC.

So the honest answer is "both, at the right times", and cold is the workhorse.

Around 15 to 20 minutes at a time, with at least 1 to 2 hours between applications. That's the window most lactation consultants and midwives recommend, and it's long enough to settle swelling and tenderness without irritating the skin or interfering with milk flow.

A few rules of thumb that make a big difference:

- **Always use a layer between the pack and your skin.** Either keep it inside a nursing bra, slide a thin cloth between, or use the soft fabric pouch the Bubba Bump packs come with. Direct skin contact with a frozen gel pack can give you mild ice burn, and breast skin is already sensitive in the early postpartum weeks.
- **Don't leave it on while you sleep.** Falling asleep with a cold pack on the breast means it sits there much longer than 20 minutes, which can lead to skin irritation and cold injury.
- **Use it between feeds, not right before.** Cold can slow let-down. If you cool the breast immediately before offering a feed, baby may have to work harder to draw milk. Apply the pack after the feed, or 1 to 2 hours before the next one.
- **Take it off if it starts to feel uncomfortable, numb or sore.** A cold pack should feel cool and a little soothing, not painful.

The Bubba Bump gel packs hold their cold for the standard 15 to 20 minute window. Long enough to do the job, short enough that you don't have to set timers around the clock. Pop them back in the freezer between uses and they're ready when you need them again.

If your breast pain is sharp, escalating, accompanied by fever, or there's a hot red patch that won't settle, that's beyond what a cold pack can do. Phone your GP, midwife or a lactation consultant the same day.

Heat has a small, specific job during breastfeeding: gentle warmth applied for a few minutes *before* a feed or pumping session, mainly to help a full, firm breast soften enough that baby can latch deeply. That's the moment heat earns its place. The rest of the time, cold is the better choice.

The most common reasons people reach for the heat side of a hot/cold breast pack:

- **Right before a feed when the breast feels rock-hard.** A short warm compress (2 to 3 minutes) plus some gentle hand expression can soften the areola so baby latches more comfortably.
- **Before pumping** if let-down is slow. A little warmth across the breast can encourage the milk-ejection reflex to kick in.
- **A blocked duct.** A warm compress applied for a few minutes before feeding or pumping, combined with feeding the baby on that side first and gentle massage, can help drain the affected area. Cold afterwards then helps with the tenderness.
- **General breast tenderness through the menstrual cycle**, breast surgery recovery (always check with your surgeon first), or during the suppression of breastfeeding when used carefully.

Heat to avoid: long applications when the breast is already engorged. Heat increases blood flow to the area, and when the breast is already swollen and full, more blood flow makes things worse. The Australian Breastfeeding Association is explicit that prolonged heat in engorgement is unhelpful.

How to warm the Bubba Bump packs: submerge in hot water or microwave at the manufacturer-specified time for your microwave's wattage. Bubba Bump's instructions are 20 seconds for a 700W microwave, 15 seconds for 1000W, and 10 seconds for 1200W. Heat in additional 5-second increments if needed until you reach the warmth you want. Always test the temperature on the inside of your wrist before applying. Overheating can damage the gel beads, so don't be tempted to round up the time.

If in doubt, lean cold. Heat is the brief, targeted helper.

Cold packs used between feeds in the recommended way (15 to 20 minutes, every 1 to 2 hours) won't dry up your milk supply. Lots of breastfeeding parents worry about this, and it's a sensible thing to ask. The cold is acting on the surface tissues of the breast, not the milk-making cells deeper inside.

What cold actually does is reduce swelling, slow the inflammatory response in the surrounding tissue, and help with the tender, full ache between feeds. It doesn't switch off prolactin (the hormone that drives milk production). It can briefly slow let-down if you apply cold immediately before a feed, which is why most LCs suggest using cold packs *after* a feed rather than before.

There is a separate context where people deliberately use cold packs to discourage milk: the suppression or weaning phase. When someone is winding down breastfeeding, cabbage leaves and cold packs are sometimes recommended alongside reduced feeding or pumping, because they help with the discomfort of the breast holding more milk than it's making room for. But the cold isn't what dries up the supply on its own. What dries up the supply is the gradual reduction in feeding and pumping. Cold just makes the process more comfortable.

So if you're breastfeeding and you want to keep your supply, using these packs as recommended is fine. If you're weaning, cold packs are part of the comfort kit, not a switch.

A few practical pointers:

- Apply between feeds, not directly before, to avoid slowing let-down.
- Limit each application to 15 to 20 minutes.
- If your breasts feel softer than usual after using cold, that's the swelling settling, not your supply going.

If supply changes have you worried, an Australian Breastfeeding Association counsellor or a private LC can talk you through what's typical.

Cold and warm compresses are part of the comfort kit many breastfeeding parents use during a mastitis episode, but they aren't a treatment on their own. Mastitis needs proper assessment, usually by a GP, midwife or lactation consultant, and sometimes antibiotics. The packs are there to make you more comfortable while you're recovering, not to replace clinical care.

What the recent guidance actually says is worth knowing. The Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine updated its mastitis protocol in 2022, and Australian breastfeeding bodies have followed. The older "more heat, more pumping, fight harder" advice has shifted. The current recommendation skews towards cold for the inflammatory phase. Ice packs between feeds for swelling, redness and the ache, with only brief warmth before a feed if the breast is so full that baby can't latch. Aggressive heat and over-pumping are no longer routinely recommended.

So a typical comfort approach during a mastitis episode often looks like:

- See a GP, midwife or LC (urgently if you have a fever, flu-like symptoms or a red, painful patch).
- Continue feeding from the affected breast (mastitis isn't a reason to stop).
- Use cold packs between feeds for 15 to 20 minutes for swelling and tenderness.
- Apply brief warmth (a few minutes) immediately before a feed if it helps with latch.
- Rest, hydration, anti-inflammatories if your GP has cleared them.
- Take the antibiotic course if one is prescribed, even if you start to feel better.

Mastitis can move quickly. Red streaks moving up the breast, a temperature that won't come down, severe pain or feeling unwell are all reasons to phone after-hours care or your GP rather than waiting things out at home.

The Bubba Bump packs are a comfort tool in this picture. Useful, but not the whole picture.

Shape, size and where they sit on the body. Bubba Bump makes two distinct products: the Breast Ice & Heat Pack pair you're looking at, and a separate Perineal Ice & Heat Pack designed for use between the legs after a vaginal birth. Both are TGA-listed Class I hot/cold therapy packs, but they aren't interchangeable.

The breast pair is contoured around the curve of the breast with a cut-out for the nipple, sized to slide inside a nursing or regular bra. It's used for engorgement, blocked-duct discomfort, sore nipples, and the firm, full feeling between feeds. Two packs come in the set so you can wear one over each breast at the same time.

The perineal pack is long and narrow, designed to sit inside a maternity pad or postpartum disposable underwear against the perineum. It's used after a vaginal birth for swelling, tenderness, grazes, stitches and haemorrhoids in the first few days. The shape conforms to the area between the legs in a way the breast packs can't.

A simple way to choose:

- **Pregnant and packing your hospital bag for a vaginal birth:** the perineal pack is the priority for the first 48 hours.
- **Breastfeeding or expecting to breastfeed:** the breast pair earns its spot for the engorgement window around days 3 to 5 and beyond.
- **Both, in the same recovery:** plenty of people buy both products. They do different jobs.

For c-section recovery, neither pack is designed to sit directly on a fresh incision. Cold around the area can help with swelling in the first few days, but always layer a clean cloth or pad between any pack and the dressing, and check with your treating midwife or surgeon if you have specific concerns. Many people find a structured compression garment more useful than a cold pack for the deeper c-section recovery feeling.

If you're not sure which one to pack, the perineal pack is the more time-critical of the two. Engorgement comes a few days in. Perineal swelling shows up immediately.

For most breastfeeding parents, the worst of engorgement lasts around 24 to 48 hours and most cases settle within a week as supply regulates. The peak window, when breast ice packs earn their spot in the freezer, is typically days 3 to 5 postpartum, when milk first "comes in" and the breasts can feel hot, hard and full at the same time.

What's actually happening: your milk supply hasn't yet calibrated to baby's appetite, so the breasts are making more than they need. Add in the fluid shifts and inflammation that come with milk coming in, and the result is that swollen, tender feeling. As baby feeds, your supply gradually adjusts, and the discomfort eases.

Engorgement can flare up again at other points, even months in:

- After a sudden gap between feeds (a longer sleep, baby sleeping through, dropping a feed).
- During night-weaning or stretching out feeds.
- During illness when baby feeds less than usual.
- Around a sudden return to work or routine change.
- During the suppression of supply when fully weaning.

In each of these moments, cold packs become the go-to comfort tool again. Most people find they reach for ice packs heavily in week one, then occasionally for the months that follow rather than daily. That's why a reusable set ends up being good value compared to single-use disposables.

Things that often help engorgement settle faster, alongside cold packs:

- Frequent feeds or expressing to the breast's comfort.
- Hand expression of a little milk before feeds if baby is struggling to latch.
- Anti-inflammatories your GP has cleared.
- Avoiding tight bras during the worst of it.

Fever, severe pain, or one breast staying hard and red while the other settles are signs to phone your GP, midwife or LC the same day rather than riding it out.

The packs come as a pair, designed to sit one over each breast inside a nursing or regular bra, with a cut-out for the nipple so you can wear them while moving around the house. They're reusable, freezable and microwavable, which means one pair handles cold *and* warm depending on where you store them between uses.

For cold therapy:

1. Store the pack in the freezer for approximately 2 hours before first use, ideally inside the soft fabric pouch it ships with. (You can also submerge it in icy water until cool if you need it sooner.)
2. Take it out when you need it. It's ready in 30 seconds or so once it's cooled to your skin.
3. Slip the pack into your bra, or wrap it in a thin cloth before applying to bare skin.
4. Wear for 15 to 20 minutes between feeds, with at least 1 to 2 hours between applications.
5. Return to the freezer for next time. Because the gel inside doesn't freeze rock-solid, the pack stays flexible enough to mould to the breast.

For warmth:

1. Submerge in hot water or microwave at the manufacturer-specified time. Bubba Bump's instructions: 20 seconds (700W), 15 seconds (1000W), 10 seconds (1200W). Heat in additional 5-second increments until warm enough.
2. Always test the temperature on the inside of your wrist first. Breast skin is more sensitive than hand skin.
3. Apply for 2 to 3 minutes before a feed or pumping session, especially if the breast feels firm or let-down is slow.
4. Don't use heat for long stretches or right after engorgement has set in. Short and targeted is the rule.

A few care tips: hand-wash the soft fabric pouch as needed, wipe the gel pack itself with a damp cloth, and don't use if the pack ever splits. Check seams every now and then in the early weeks of heavy use.

Stored properly, one set tends to last well past the first baby and through the next one too.

Yes. These packs are designed specifically for the breastfeeding and pumping period, and the way they're typically used (cold between feeds, brief warmth before) is consistent with what Australian midwives, lactation consultants and the Australian Breastfeeding Association recommend.

A few specific safety points worth knowing:

- **The gel inside is non-toxic and stays inside the sealed pack.** That's a Class I device requirement for ARTG-listed hot/cold packs in Australia.
- **Always layer between the pack and skin** when using cold, to avoid mild ice burn.
- **Test heat temperature first** on the inside of your wrist before applying.
- **You don't need to remove the pack to feed**, but most people find it easier to feed without anything bulky in the bra. Take it out, then put it back in once you're done.
- **The packs are not for baby's use.** They're sized and shaped for adult breast tissue, and cold packs aren't appropriate for infants.
- **Don't use on open wounds.** That includes a fresh nipple crack that's broken the skin or any other broken-skin area on the breast.
- **Discard the pack if it's damaged or splits.** The gel beads aren't for ingestion, and a split pack can't be used safely.

If you have any of the following, check with your treating clinician before using cold or heat on the breast:

- A fresh post-surgical incision, lumpectomy or other breast surgery. Wait until your surgeon has cleared cold and heat over the area.
- Reduced sensation in the breast (sometimes after radiation or surgery), where it can be harder to tell if a pack is too cold or too hot.
- Skin conditions like eczema flaring on the breast.
- Active infection where the affected breast is hot, red and you have a fever. Your GP or LC needs to assess first.

Some pumping parents like to use the warm side briefly *before* a pump to help let-down, and the cold side after a pump for comfort. That's a common rhythm and one many lactation consultants suggest. The packs are designed to be popped in and out of the bra on a feeding or pumping schedule without much fuss.

Look for a TGA-listed pair, contoured for the breast with a nipple cut-out, reusable, safe to both freeze and microwave, and made from a gel that stays flexible when frozen. Those five features separate a useful breast ice and heat pack from one that ends up in the back of a drawer.

Each one in detail:

- **TGA-listed (ARTG-registered).** In Australia, hot/cold therapy packs marketed for therapeutic use should be TGA-listed as a Class I medical device. The Bubba Bump pair sits on ARTG 374111. Listing isn't a guarantee of effectiveness, but it does mean the product has been notified to the regulator and meets baseline safety standards for materials and labelling.
- **Designed for the breast, not generic.** A flat rectangular gel pack isn't shaped for the breast. Look for a contoured shape with a nipple cut-out so the pack sits flush and doesn't press uncomfortably during use.
- **Reusable, not single-use.** Most parents end up using these on and off across the months and years of feeding, possibly across more than one baby. Reusable gel packs are better value than disposables, easier on landfill, and you don't run out at 2am.
- **Both hot and cold capable.** A pack that only works as cold is half a tool. Look for one that's safe to microwave or warm in water as well as freeze.
- **Comes in a pair.** Two packs, one per breast, used at the same time. A single pack means swapping sides every 10 minutes which is a hassle when you're sleep-deprived.
- **Stays flexible when frozen.** Some cheap gel packs freeze rock-solid, which makes them painful and impossible to mould to the breast. Better packs use a gel formula that stays pliable.
- **Soft fabric pouch.** A cover protects skin and the pack itself.

The Bubba Bump pair ticks each of these. TGA-listed, contoured, reusable, hot or cold, supplied as a pair, flexible when frozen. At $39.99 it sits in the same price band as Lansinoh, Lactivate and the SRC Health pair, with the added compliance reassurance of being notified to the TGA register under its own ARTG number.

If a specific feature matters more to you (slimmer profile, sleeve cover, scent), comparing the spec sheets on a couple of options before buying is the most reliable way to land on the right one.

Breast Ice & Heat Packs β€” Engorgement & Mastitis Relief

Breast Ice & Heat Packs β€” Engorgement & Mastitis Relief

$39.99

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