Results 201 to 210 of about 51,995 (242)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Human Milk Banks in Brazil

Journal of Human Lactation, 1998
This article reports on the undertaking of the Instituto Fernandes Figueira/Fundacao Oswaldo Cruz (FIOCRUZ) in Rio de Janeiro Brazil to establish guidelines for human milk banking procedures with public health oversight to guarantee maximum quality.
D, Gutiérrez, J A, de Almeida
openaire   +2 more sources

Human Milk Donation Is an Alternative to Human Milk Bank

Breastfeeding Medicine, 2012
Human milk bank is a source of human milk supply in many neonatal intensive care units. However, there are some hospitals without this facility because of financial or religious impediments, such as the Muslim community.We introduced human milk donation as an alternative to human milk banking based on Islamic principles. The suitable donor is a healthy
Ho-Torng, Hsu   +5 more
openaire   +2 more sources

The Human Milk Bank

Nature, 1948
[The first Human Milk Bank in Great Britain was established at Queen Charlotte‘s Hospital, London, in 1938, through the initiative and under the expert guidance of Miss Edith Dare, then the matron, with the financial assistance of the late Sir Julian Cahn through the National Birthday Trust Fund. This Bank followed closely on the heels of similar banks
openaire   +2 more sources

Human Milk—Treatment and Quality of Banked Human Milk

Clinics in Perinatology, 2017
The aim of human milk banks is to deliver safe and high quality donor human milk. Treatment of human milk has to destroy most microorganisms while preserving immunological and nutrient components, which is obtained when using low time low temperature pasteurization.
Jean-Charles, Picaud, Rachel, Buffin
openaire   +2 more sources

Human Milk Banking

Pediatrics, 1980
The experience of Finnish workers, as well as that of others, shows that the banking of heattreated and frozen human milk is a practical and safe means of feeding low-birth-weight newborn infants. The continuous and exclusive use of human milk is associated with a low incidence of infection and with a rate of survival which is among the highest ...
Lewis A. Barness   +6 more
openaire   +1 more source

HUMAN MILK BANKING PRACTICES

Pediatrics, 1971
On June 13, 1970, an informal meeting was held in San Francisco sponsored by the Mothers' Milk Bank to review current methods for collection, decontamination, and storage of human milk, in the light of evidence which has accumulated in the past few years.
openaire   +2 more sources

Human milk banking to 1985. [PDF]

open access: possibleBreastfeeding review : professional publication of the Nursing Mothers' Association of Australia, 2012
This paper provides a literature review of the use of donor human milk by hospitals in Australia and elsewhere from the postwar period through to the early 1980s, and establishes the context for a small study of practices which happened in that period. The latter study will be reported elsewhere.
openaire   +1 more source

Human Milk Banking

Clinical Pediatrics, 1981
The storage of human milk at 4 C for 48 hours after expression resulted in a significant (p < 0.02) loss of cellular viability. Further, the concentration of milk macrophages and neutrophils decreased significantly (p < 0.02), pre sumably via cell adhesion to the milk container or cytolysis.
W B, Pittard, K, Bill
openaire   +2 more sources

The Development of a Research Human Milk Bank

Journal of Human Lactation, 2005
Although there are well-established clinical human milk banks in the United States, there are no milk banks specifically intended to foster research on human milk. The authors’goalwas to establish a milk bank with a core data set to support exploratory and hypothesis-driven studies on human milk.
Sheela R, Geraghty   +7 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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