Breastmilk Does A Baby Good!
Extremely low birth weight infants weigh between 401 and 1,000 grams at birth. That's slightly less than one pound to just less than 2.2 pounds. Unfortunately, these infants are too tiny to nurse and must be fed orally via a gavage tube. Physicians at Cincinnati Children's recognize that it is difficult for mothers to provide their own milk, but they strongly encourage them to do so.
"We encourage mothers to pump and collect their own breast milk and bring it to the hospital to be fed to their baby," says Edward Donovan, MD, a neonatologist at Cincinnati Children's and a co-author of the study. "It's not an easy thing to ask of mothers, and I think care givers can probably do a better job of supporting them in this endeavor."
Sepsis is a major cause of death and long-term disability in extremely low birth weight infants. As many as 30 percent develop an overwhelming infection, and as many as 20 percent die.
The Cincinnati Children's researchers analyzed data on 1270 infants enrolled in an unrelated study at 15 centers. Thirty-nine percent had sepsis, and those who did "received significantly less human milk than infants who were never infected," says Meinzen-Derr.
Extremely low birth weight infants who developed sepsis received milk as 29 percent of total intake. Infants never infected received milk as 33 percent of total intake, according to Meinzen-Derr. ![]()