Human milk has the greatest potential impact on child survival. Breastmilk is critical for preterm and low birth weight infants, the lack of which increases their vulnerability to illness, and can lead to death. Yet, many babies often miss out on mothers’ milk due to difficulty in suckling, poor or no lactation in mothers, admission away from their mothers in neonatal intensive care units with inadequate systems to collect, store and feed mothers’ milk, abandonment, mothers’ illness or death. For such babies with no access to mothers’ milk, donor human milk from a breast milk bank has been recommended as the next best alternative. Our data https://indianpediatrics.net/aug2019/663.pdf) shows that between 30 to 50 percent of vulnerable babies in neonatal intensive care units and 10 to 20 percent of full term babies in India do not have access to breast milk. While the importance of human milk cannot be denied, how do we enable access to human milk for all babies?
Human milk bank --A powerful intervention
A human milk bank (HMB) recruits donors, collects donor human milk, and then processes, screens, stores and distributes the milk to needy infants. Over the years, we have found that rather than a standalone model focused on collection and distribution, an integrated approach has greater positive impact on infant nutrition and health. The integrated approach positions HMBs as lactation hubs within hospitals that support mothers to breastfeed and express milk, provide milk banking services, and encourage mothers and families to provide kangaroo mother care (skin to skin contact between baby and parent).