The global revival of human milk banking: benefits for preterm infants, social impacts, and ongoing controversies.
Join Healthy Development Adelaide (HDA) and Women’s and Children’s Hospital Grand Round on the global revival of human milk banking.
This event is free and will be held on:
Wednesday 26 June, 12.30-1.30pm
Queen Victoria Building, Lecture Theatre,
Level 1, Women’s and Children’s Hospital, North Adelaide
in person and livestreamed online via MS Teams
This event is free and open to everyone to attend from researchers, clinicians, students, government and the community.
REGISTER HERE!
In the past decade there has been a resurgence in milk banking, driven by increased recognition of the advantages of human milk for preterm infants. Drawing on local and international research, this presentation examines the benefits of donor human milk for preterm infants and current controversies including safety, access and the need to protect milk banks from commercial interests.
CHAIR : Rachael Yates (HDA Ambassador), Executive Director of Nursing and Midwifery, Women’s and Children’s Health Network.
SPEAKER: Professor Alice Rumbold is a perinatal epidemiologist and Leader of the Women and Kids Theme of the South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute (SAHMRI), located within the Women’s and Children’s Hospital, Women’s and Children’s Health Network. She is Director of the Centre of Research Excellence in Human Milk Nutrition for Preterm Infants, bringing together a multidisciplinary team of experts across Australia to optimise the use of human milk for preterm infants. She has built and led internationally recognised research programs focussed on reducing adverse reproductive and perinatal health exposures and interventions to reduce the burden of prematurity, including promotion of human milk feeding. Her research has been published in top-ranking journals such as the New England Journal of Medicine, Human Reproduction and the American Journal of Epidemiology.
Professor Rumbold is also a recipient of a 2024 Research Funding Grant from the Channel 7 Children’s Research Foundation.
New strategies to improve breastfeeding outcomes in preterm infants.