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Indian Pediatr ; 2019 Aug; 56(8): 663-668
Artigo | IMSEAR | ID: sea-199369

RESUMO

Objective: To evaluate the existing status of human milk banks in India with reference toinfrastructure, human resources, funding mechanisms, operating procedures and qualityassurance. Methods: A pretested questionnaire was administered to 16 out of 22 human milkbanks across India, operational for more than one year prior to commencing the study.Results: 11 (69%) milk banks were in government or charitable hospitals; only 2 (12.5%)were established with government funding. 8 (50%) had a dedicated technician and only1(6%) had more than five lactation counsellors. Milk was collected predominantly frommothers of sick babies and in postnatal care wards followed by pediatric outpatientdepartments, camps, satellite centers, and homes. 10 (63%) reported gaps between donormilk demand and supply. 12 (75%) used shaker water bath pasteurizer and cooled the milkmanually without monitoring temperature, and 4 (25%) pooled milk under the laminar airflow.10 (63%) tracked donor to recipient and almost all did not collect data on early initiation,exclusive breastfeeding or human milk feeding. Conclusion: Our study reports the gaps ofmilk banking practices in India, which need to be addressed for strengthening them. Gapsinclude suboptimal financial support from the government, shortage of key human resources,processes and data gaps, and demand supply gap of donor human milk.

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