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Documents disponibles dans cette catégorie (142)
Article : texte imprimé
Pasinee Kanaprach, Auteur ; Nutkridta Pongsakul, Auteur ; Nopporn Apiwattanakul, Auteur |Background: Donor human milk is considered the next best nutrition following mother's own milk to prevent neonatal infection and necrotizing enterocolitis in preterm infants who are admitted at neonatal intensive care unit. However, donor milk b[...]Article : texte imprimé
Linda Murray, Auteur ; Simplicia Maria Anggrahini, Auteur ; Rahel Rara Woda, Auteur |Background: The eastern Indonesian province of Nusa Tenggara Timur (NTT) has an infant mortality rate of 45 per 1000, higher than the national average (28/1000). Exclusive breastfeeding, important for improving newborn and infant survival, is e[...]Article : texte imprimé
Maryanne Tigchelaar Perrin, Auteur ; Suzanne L. Goodell, Auteur ; April Fogleman, Auteur |Background: Lactating women in the United States have several options for what they do with excess breast milk, including donating to milk banks that serve medically fragile infants, sharing directly with families seeking milk, and selling to i[...]Article : texte imprimé
Background The need for donor human milk has accelerated both locally and globally. To remain sustainable, human milk banks need to maintain effective recruitment including frequent donations of adequate volumes. Research aims To determine [...]Article : texte imprimé
L. Doshmangir, Auteur ; Maryam Naghshi, Auteur ; Roghayeh Khabiri, Auteur |Introduction: Mother's own milk has long been accepted as the best source of nutrition for the newborn. In those cases where mother's milk is not available, the best choice is the human milk provided by selected donors. Human milk banks are the [...]Article : texte imprimé
Linda L. Friend, Auteur ; Maryanne T. Perrin, Auteur |Background: The impact of milk banking processes on macronutrient variability in donor human milk (DHM) is largely unknown. Objective: To gain a better understanding of fat and protein composition in DHM and assess potential relationships wit[...]Article : texte imprimé
Elizabeth Brownell, Auteur ; Kelsey C. Smith, Auteur ; Erin L. Cornell, Auteur |Objective: To identify independent maternal and infant factors associated with donor milk nonconsent and to examine secular trends in nonconsent rates. Materials and Methods: Mothers of infants eligible to receive donor milk (≤32 weeks [...]Article : texte imprimé
Erynn M. Bergner, Auteur ; Roman Shypailo, Auteur ; Chonnikant Visuthranukul, Auteur |Background: Long-term outcomes of preterm infants fed an exclusive human milk-based (EHM) diet using a donor human milk-based fortifier are not well defined. Materials and Methods: Infants ≤1,250 g birth weight (BW) were studied p[...]texte imprimé
This book is a practical guide for medical practitioners as they navigate through breastfeeding problems that occur in day-to-day practice. If mothers have a breastfeeding complication they are often directed to their GP. In complex situation[...]Article : texte imprimé
Guido E. Moro, Auteur |The origins of donor human milk banking can be traced to the early practice of wet nursing, in which children were breastfed by friends, relatives, or strangers. Rules governing wet nursing are described in the Babylonian Code of Hammurabi (roug[...]Article : texte imprimé
Sergio Verd, Auteur ; Roser Porta, Auteur ; Francesc Botet, Auteur |Aim: This study evaluated the impact of an exclusive human milk diet to nourish extremely low birth weight infants in the neonatal intensive care unit. Materials and Methods: This multicenter prepost retrospective study included all inborn i[...]Article : texte imprimé
Jack Stevens, Auteur ; Sarah A. Keim, Auteur |Many hospitalized preterm infants do not exclusively receive mothers own milk, so milk from another mother may be sought. Previous research indicated that just 1% of US women who express breast milk actually donate it for another family. Theref[...]Article : texte imprimé
Molly R. Rabinowitz, Auteur ; Laura R. Kair, Auteur ; Heather L. Sipsma, Auteur |Background: Breastfeeding is fundamental to maternal and child health and is the most cost-effective intervention to reduce child mortality. Pasteurized human donor milk (HDM) is increasingly provided for term newborns requiring temporary supple[...]Article : texte imprimé
Mohammed Ghaly, Auteur |Human milk banks have been established in > 35 countries worldwide; however, there are currently no human milk banks in the Islamic countries. The Islamic tradition recognizes breast milk as the optimal source of nutrition for infants, yet relig[...]Article : texte imprimé
Wenjing Peng, Auteur ; Siyuan Jiang, Auteur |Background Previous low human milk feeding rates in Chinese neonatal intensive care units of preterm infants were reported. There are no nationwide data on these. Research Aims To investigate the current status of human milk feeding for pre[...]Article : texte imprimé
Beatriz M. Reyes-Foster, Auteur ; Shannon K. Carter, Auteur ; Melanie Sberna Hinojosa, Auteur |Background: Peer milk sharing, the noncommercial sharing of human milk from one parent or caretaker directly to another for the purposes of feeding a child, appears to be an increasing infant-feeding practice. Although the U.S. Food and Drug Ad[...]Article : texte imprimé
Carolin Marx, Auteur ; Renee Bridge, Auteur ; Alison K. Wolf, Auteur |Background: Human milk oligosaccharides (HMO) represent the third most abundant component of human breast milk. More than a hundred structurally distinct HMO have been identified, and the HMO composition varies between mothers as well as over t[...]Article : texte imprimé
The process by which women came to donate milk via online milk sharing networks was explored via a questionnaire administered to 97 peer milk donors. Seventy-one respondents stated that they were motivated to donate milk because they wanted to h[...]Article : texte imprimé
Mother's own human milk is the best nutrition for infants, especially preterm very-low-birth-weight (VLBW) (≤1,500 g) infants, because of its immune-modulatory constituents that strengthen the infant's host defense, provide protectio[...]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
Amir Elmekkawi, Auteur ; Deborah L. O'Connor, Auteur ; Debbie Stone, Auteur |Background: Unpasteurized human donor milk typically contains a variety of bacteria. The impact of neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) admission of the donors infant and duration of lactation on bacterial contamination of human milk is unknown[...]Article : texte imprimé
Margaret G.K. Parker, Auteur ; Laura Burnham, Auteur ; Wenyang Mao, Auteur |Background: It is unclear whether use of donor milk (DM) changes the provision of mothers own milk (MOM) to very low birth weight (VLBW) infants in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). Objectives: To determine whether (1) the rates of [...]Article : texte imprimé
Aleksandra Wesolowska, Auteur ; Urszula Bernatowicz-Lojko, Auteur ; E Sinkieqicz-Darol, Auteur |Background A human-milk-based diet is the best option for nutritional therapy for preterm and/or sick newborns. Research aim The study aims were to restructure the reimbursement rates to hospitals in Poland for infants tube feedings to fav[...]Article : texte imprimé
Moshe Yair Kassierer, Auteur ; Deborah L. O'Connor, Auteur ; Eva Rutherford, Auteur |Jewish law recognizes the importance of breast milk, and breastfeeding rates are high among religious mothers. Infants born at very low birth weight are medically fragile, and breast milk is of critical importance for their health protection and[...]