×
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Mother's milk bank boon for infants

Last Updated : 01 June 2013, 20:31 IST
Last Updated : 01 June 2013, 20:31 IST

Follow Us :

Comments

This bank is not about money, just goodwill. India’s fourth mother’s milk bank in this Rajasthan town is saving the lives of frail or critically ill infants whose biological mothers are unable to feed them for a variety of reasons.

The Divya Mothers Milk Bank (DMMB) in Udaipur has provided 173 units of mother’s milk in about two months to infants in immediate need as they have been hospitalised with life-threatening diseases or are suffering from other problems. Each unit contains 30 ml of mother’s milk.

“Mother’s milk can save the life of an infant born in some particular condition. It is like giving blood to an accident victim who needs it immediately,” said Devendra Agrawal, founder of the Maa Bhagwati Vikas Sansthan, an NGO that runs the bank.
North India’s first bank of a kind was inaugurated by Rajasthan health minister A A Khan on April 14. It is the fourth functional mother’s milk bank after Pune, Mumbai and Surat, Agrawal said.

“In over two-and-a-half months, we have collected 307 units of mother milk from 30 donors. About 173 units were provided to infants on prescription of doctors,” he said.
He added that the bank had provided succour to many families in this area that has a high infant mortality rate — 63 per 1,000 live births as compared to the India
figure of 53. “As per government records, one in eight babies is born preterm in our country and fewer than half of mothers who deliver a baby prematurely are able to provide their babies with breast milk. Through the milk bank, we can save 16 of 100 premature infants,” he added.

A survey conducted by the Rajasthan government, he said, found that 42 per cent of newborns in the state were undernourished and needed mother’s milk.
Besides, through breast feeding and donated mother’s milk, infant mortality rate can be reduced by 22 per cent.

According to Archana Shaktawat, project coordinator, several women are coming forward to donate their milk.

“We are raising awareness in the area. Women who have surplus milk or can donate mother milk due to other reasons are coming forward. We don’t financially compensate them,” she said.

Infants in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), those with life-threatening diseases or those whose mothers are HIV+ are provided mother’s milk from the bank. Besides, milk is also provided to multiple birth babies whose mothers cannot keep up with the milk required to nourish their infants or those who are on medication.

ADVERTISEMENT
Published 01 June 2013, 20:31 IST

Deccan Herald is on WhatsApp Channels| Join now for Breaking News & Editor's Picks

Follow us on :

Follow Us

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT