2ND IN AFRICA, OTHER IN S.AFRICA

First breast milk bank opening at Pumwani

Will cater for vulnerable babies who have no access to their mother's milk, reduce hospital stays

In Summary

• Vulnerable newborns who cannot get breast milk will benefit

• Milk will be screened, pasteurised and stored for use within six months

Breast milk supplements in a Nairobi supermarket on March 26
MOTHER'S MILK: Breast milk supplements in a Nairobi supermarket on March 26
Image: MAGDALINE SAYA

Kenya's first breast milk bank under will be opened on Friday at Pumani Maternity Hospital.

The milk will help vulnerable newborns who cannot get their mothers' breast milk.

It will be the only breast milk facility in the region; a similar bank is in South Africa.

The milk is collected from lactating mothers who have milk to spare.

The mothers are screened, express their milk, which is processed, pasteurised and stored.

Pumwani has installed a pasteuriser that can hold  9.4 million litres, two fridges and four freezers with a  240-litre capacity.

The milk is heated at 60.5 degrees Celsius for 30 minutes then suddenly cooled. It is packaged and stored, usable for six months.

“We will have a very good cold chain system during the storage to ensure as soon as the milk is out of the pasteuriser it goes straight to the fridges and freezers,” Nairobi county nutrition coordinator Esther Kwamboka said.

The freezers will have temperature monitoring both within the freezers and in the room. A technical team will always be on standby to run the machines once in a while to ensure high safety standards.

Kwamboka said the milk may lose a few micronutrients, such as heat-sensitive vitamin C, because of boiling at a high temperature.

But children will get the nutrients through supplements.

The World Health Organization recommends that when a mother is not able to feed her baby, donated human milk should be used.

“We have breast milk substitutes such as formula, breast milk fortifiers and other products. With human milk, we will have fewer cases of intolerance,” Kwamboka said.

The breast milk bank is expected to improve health and nutrition among vulnerable children.

Kwamboka said the milk bank will reduce hospital stays for needy babies, so it will also be economical for the hospital, parents and the government.

 

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