About this event
Short Description:
Nonprofit milk banks provide a safe and affordable source of pasteurized donor human milk to premature infants in the NICU setting. Pediatric outpatients with formula intolerance and other serious medical conditions may also benefit from donor milk. Nonprofit milk banks use Holder pasteurization to deactivate bacterial and viral contaminants while maintaining bioactive factors that help shape a healthy infant microbiome. Join this webinar to gain a behind-the-scenes look at a nonprofit milk bank, where science, safety, and ethics converge to ensure equitable access and community engagement.
Objectives:
1. Identify two human milk bioactive factors that help shape the infant microbiome.
2. Identify two bioactive factors that are retained after pasteurization.
3. Identify two themes that emerge from the experience of donating milk after perinatal loss.
This program has been approved for 1.0 Contact Hours; provider approved by the California Board of Registered Nursing, Provider #13692
Hosted by
Summer serves as the Executive Director of the Mothers’ Milk Bank of the Western Great Lakes. She holds a BSN from Rush University and an MS in Biology from Northeastern Illinois University, where she researched the bioactive components of human milk. Summer currently serves as President of the Human Milk Banking Association of North America (HMBANA), where she also chairs the Accreditation Committee. She is passionate about food safety, the biology of human milk, and native prairies and their pollinators.
We believe in turning science into care. Offering solutions based on deep insights into research and nature. Listening to real needs. For the benefit of mothers, patients and healthcare professionals.