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Sarah A. Keim, Auteur ; Kelly A. McNamara, Auteur ; Chelsea E. Dillon, Auteur |Background: Feeding infants unscreened, raw human milk from a source other than the mother may pose health risks. The objectives of the Moms2Moms Study were to estimate the proportions of mothers who were aware of breastmilk sharing, considered [...]Article : texte imprimé
Sheela R. Geraghty., Auteur ; Kelly A. McNamara, Auteur ; Chelsea E. Dillon, Auteur |Background: For past centuries, infants have been fed the milk of mothers who are not their own by latching to another woman's breast. Today, the majority of lactating women use electric pumps to extract milk from their breasts; thus, an infant [...]Article : texte imprimé
The recommendation that mothers' own milk, appropriately fortified, should be the primary enteral diet for all very low-birth-weight infants (i.e., birth weight less than 1.5 kg) has been universally accepted as the standard of care.1 But [...]Article : texte imprimé
Sara Vázquez-Román, Auteur ; Diana Escuder-Vieco, Auteur ; Nadia Raquel García-Lara, Auteur |Objective: Although under certain circumstances it is necessary to express milk, there are not many recommendations about the ideal storage conditions for human milk. The objectives of this study were to analyze the effects on Dornic acidity of [...]Article : texte imprimé
Maryanne Tigchelaar Perrin, Auteur ; Suzanne L. Goodell, Auteur ; Jonathan C. Allen, Auteur |Objectives: The Food and Drug Administration discourages the casual sharing of human milk because of the risk of pathogen transmission. No information is currently available on the prevalence of this practice. The purpose of this mixed-methods o[...]Article : document cartographique imprimé
However, feeding fresh raw milk has its own risks for the immunologically compromised very preterm infants. Epidemiologic studies have documented that 7080% of mothers are seropositive for cytomegalovirus (CMV) before their pregnancy. In more t[...]