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Saving African babies’ lives by banking mothers’ milk

Mothers’ breast milk can make the difference between life and death for babies around the world. But getting that milk from point A – mothers who have more than they need – to point B – babies whose mothers don’t produce enough – can be expensive and complicated. 

The solution? Breast milk banks, which connect providers and consumers.

Why We Wrote This

Breast milk can make an enormous difference in helping babies thrive. Now milk banks are blossoming in Africa, where they’re most needed.

Globally, scientists estimate that breast milk, with its one-two punch of nutrients and immunity-boosting agents, could save the lives of more than 800,000 babies and young children every year. But the countries where milk banks are most needed, mainly in Africa, are the countries where the fewest such facilities exist.

Brazil is the world leader in this field, with a third of the world’s milk banks and child mortality rates that fell by 70% between 1990 and 2013.

In recent years, Brazil has taken its milk bank show on the road, helping to set up banks in Portuguese- and Spanish-speaking countries around the world – including in Africa. But many gaps remain. 

Chinny Obanwanne is in the process of setting up Nigeria’s first milk bank, designed to help the most vulnerable: premature babies. “It gives them a higher chance of survival,” she says.

Inside a tidy mint-green room in an old industrial park in Johannesburg, a row of freezers hums and sighs. Behind them, a silver machine the size of a dishwasher sloshes hot water over three dozen bottles of milk. A sign on the wall signals the room’s raison d’être.

Breastmilk is nature’s health plan, it reads. 

Around the world, milk banks like this one have sprung up as a solution to a public health issue that’s straightforward in itself but complicated to tackle. Breast milk can make the difference between life and death for many babies around the world, particularly those born prematurely. But getting that milk from point A – mothers who have more than they need – to point B – babies whose mothers don’t produce enough – can be expensive and complicated. 

Why We Wrote This

Breast milk can make an enormous difference in helping babies thrive. Now milk banks are blossoming in Africa, where they’re most needed.

“It’s a huge undertaking,” says Emily Njuguna, a pediatrician and public health specialist who helped set up Kenya’s first human milk bank at Pumwani Maternity Hospital, a public hospital in Nairobi. Bureaucrats initially scratched their heads at her pitch. Expensive imported pasteurization machines broke down and then sat unused for months. Big bills for milk collection, medical testing, and storage gobbled up limited funds. “But the benefits have been immense,” she says. 

Globally, scientists estimate that breast milk, with its one-two punch of nutrients and immunity-boosting agents, could save the lives of more than 800,000 babies and young children every year. In sub-Saharan Africa, which has the highest infant mortality of any region in the world, its benefits could make a particularly large difference.  

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