Tag: breast

  • Breast surgeon Dr Raghu Ram receives Telugu Association of London award

    Breast surgeon Dr Raghu Ram receives Telugu Association of London award

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    Hyderabad: Leading surgeon Dr Raghu Ram Pillarisetti has received lifetime achievement award by the Telugu Association of London.

    Dr Raghuram is the founding director of AKIMS-Ushalakshmi Centre for Breast Diseases in Hyderabad. He is one of the youngest recipients of the award and the only person of Indian origin living outside of the UK to have been conferred the honour.

    The award was presented to him during the glittering Ugadi 2023 celebrations organised by the Telugu Association of London (TAL) in London. Representing over 10,000 Telugu speaking people in and around London, TAL is the largest Telugu Charity Organisation in the UK.

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    “TAL has recognised Dr Raghu Ram with the Lifetime Achievement Award for his outstanding contribution towards transforming Breast Cancer Care in India. His distinguished academic track record, love for his motherland and passion for social service are his trademarks and he has achieved at a very young age, what most cannot achieve in a lifetime,” reads the citation.

    TAL founder chairman Dr Ramulu Dasoju and current chairperson Bharathi Kandukuri read out excerpts from the citation. Councillor Raghwinder Siddhu, Mayor of London Brorough of Hounslow, described Dr Raghu Ram as a perfect role model living bridge between the UK and India and has been an advocate of best practices in his chosen field coupled with human touch and many altruistic values.”

    Tollywood actor Sai Kumar felicitated Dr Raghu Ram with a “Lifetime Achievement award Pagadi” during the event.

    A Padma Shri and Dr B.C. Roy national awardee, Dr Raghu Ram revolutionised breast cancer care in India over the past 17 years through a series of innovative measures. He established South Asia’s First comprehensive Breast Health Centre and founded a charitable Foundation to raise awareness of the disease nationwide. He implemented South Asia’s largest population-based screening programme in the southern Indian states of Telangana and Andhra Pradesh. This programme is currently being rolled out nationwide.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Beyond the pale? Why the EU is regulating breast milk

    Beyond the pale? Why the EU is regulating breast milk

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    The European Union regulates all sorts of banks: money banks, blood banks, sperm banks. 

    Its next target? Breast milk banks.

    Brussels bureaucrats want to homogenize the rules overseeing the donation and use of donor breast milk across the bloc. 

    It’s part of the European Commission’s proposed revamp of the laws covering safety and quality standards for substances of human origin (SoHO) intended for human use. Currently, the laws cover blood, tissues and cells, but the EU wants to extend coverage to all SoHO — including donor breast milk.

    While, at first glance, it might seem like the EU is trying to milk its regulatory powers, experts are largely in favor of the plan to set EU-wide standards, saying it will improve its availability and safety.

    With lawmakers and EU countries debating the revamp, POLITICO walks you through the issue.

    What are breast milk banks?

    Women who make more breast milk than their babies need can donate it to a breast milk bank.

    These banks screen donors and collect, process and distribute the milk to infants in need — those whose mother’s own milk is not available or sufficient.

    While exclusive breastfeeding is recommended for all babies in the first six months of their life, it’s especially important for premature or sick newborns, experts say.

    Among many other benefits, breast milk contains antibodies that are important for newborns’ immune systems. Babies born before 30 weeks of pregnancy are especially susceptible to infections, particularly from necrotizing enterocolitis, a type of gut inflammation that can be fatal. Their survival rates improve when they get human milk as compared with formula, said Elien Rouw, a breastfeeding medicine specialist in Germany and president-elect of the Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine.

    There are currently 282 breast milk banks in Europe, including Turkey and Ukraine, according to the European Milk Bank Association.

    Aren’t they already regulated?

    Donor breast milk is regulated differently in different countries. For example, it’s considered a health product in France, a food in Germany, and is uncategorized and unregulated in Romania. And while the safety standards are set at the national level in France, for instance, they are set at the regional level in Belgium.

    GettyImages 1240592722
    The Commission wants to harmonize breast milk safety standards across the EU | Kenzo Tribouillard/AFP via Getty Images

    There is some level of convergence though. For example, most national guidelines in the world recommend donor breast milk should be pasteurized, according to the European Milk Bank Association.

    In France, for example, the milk is first tested for bacteria and highly contaminated milk is thrown out, explains Jean-Charles Picaud, professor of pediatrics specialized in neonatology at Hôpital de la Croix-Rousse in Lyon, and president of the French Human Milk Bank Association. The rest is then pasteurized at precisely 62.5 degrees Celsius for exactly 30 minutes and then retested before being made available for babies.

    What does the Commission want to do?

    The Commission wants to harmonize safety standards across the EU, not only to ensure the safety of the babies that consume breast milk, but also to make it easier for donor breast milk — and other SoHO — to cross borders. 

    Donor milk banks are unevenly spread out across the Continent. There are over 30 in France, for example, but only four in Belgium and one in Romania. And parts of Europe are facing a shortage of donor breast milk, while it remains in limited supply elsewhere. 

    “There are children dying in Germany because they didn’t have, or didn’t have enough, human milk,” Rouw, the breastfeeding medicine specialist in Germany, said. Centers in Germany caring for extremely premature babies without direct access to a milk bank are buying it in part from Belgium and the United States, she added.

    Experts agree that having harmonized safety standards would make the cross-border exchange of breast milk easier, improving babies’ access to it. These include things like donor selection criteria, maternal blood tests for infections, hygiene standards during collection, cold chain conditions during transport, and testing the milk for bacteria, said Picaud, president of the French Human Milk Bank Association.

    However, while the Commission is setting out the principle of bloc-wide standards in its regulation, it aims to leave it to expert bodies — the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) and the European Directorate for the Quality of Medicines & HealthCare (EDQM) — to hammer out the precise scientific and technical details so that these can be more easily updated should the need arise.

    Should donors get paid?

    The debate over paying for substances of human origin is a divisive one. Germany’s Human Milk Bank Initiative, a nongovernmental organization that promotes nonprofit donor milk banks, warned in a position statement to the Commission in 2020 that “ethically questionable approaches” have been used globally to acquire human milk from “lactating mothers in resource-limited regions or from socio-economically disadvantaged populations.”

    EU countries take varying approaches when it comes to donor compensation for breast milk. Donors in France, for instance, receive no financial compensation. In Sweden, donating mothers receive a nominal 250 Swedish krona (€22.56) per liter of donated milk.

    The Commission’s proposed revision includes guidance on compensation for all SoHO donors, to allow any financial losses to be covered — but leaves it to EU countries to determine whether to allow it and if so, the conditions for it, ensuring they remain “financially neutral.”

    As well as human milk banks, the new law would also apply to any company looking to commercialize breast milk as an ingredient.

    GettyImages 1241500767
    A nurse checks reserves of breast milk in the Sant’Anna hospital in Turin, Italy | Diana Bagnoli/Getty Images

    Given the growing body of research showing the clinical benefits of donor breast milk for premature babies, hospital-affiliated milk banks around the world are expanding their activities — and there’s also growing commercial interest, a Commission spokesperson told POLITICO.

    At least one company is using breast milk to make fortifiers for sick and premature babies in the neonatal intensive care unit, which are then added to either a mother’s milk or donor milk.



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )

  • Telangana: Banswada MCH becomes India’s first ‘breast feeding friendly’ govt hospital

    Telangana: Banswada MCH becomes India’s first ‘breast feeding friendly’ govt hospital

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    Hyderabad: The Mother and Children Hospital in Banswada, Kamareddy district, has been designated as India’s first government ‘breastfeeding friendly’ hospital for implementing the World Health Organization’s (WHO) ten measures for successful breastfeeding and guidance on the Government of India’s Mother’s Absolute Accordance (MAA) programme.

    The accreditation certificate is valid from February 17th of this year until February 16th of 2026.

    The Breastfeeding Promotion Network of India (BPNI) and the Association of Health Providers India (AHPI) select hospitals based on a set of criteria, and the Breastfeeding Friendly Hospital Initiative – National Accreditation Centre awards certificates (BFHI-NAC). The hospital received certification after two rounds of inspection.

    The BFHI accreditation is currently held by seven hospitals in India, both public and private. The BPNI also has volunteers all over the country who help educate pregnant and lactating women on the benefits of feeding their child breast milk within 30 minutes of birth. Three of these volunteers are from Banswada’s Mother and Children Hospital.

    Telangana health minister T Harish Rao expressed delight over the development and congratulated the doctors and staff of the hospital.

    “Delighted to share that for the first time in the country Banswada Mother & Child hospital received breastfeeding-friendly accreditation by BFHI- NAC.

    Kudos to doctors and staff for implementing
    @WHO
    ’s steps to successful breastfeeding & guidance of MAA program,” he tweeted on Friday.

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    #Telangana #Banswada #MCH #Indias #breast #feeding #friendly #govt #hospital

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )