It is estimated that in resource-poor areas of the world, 3.3 million
neonatal deaths occur within the first four weeks of life every year.
According to the Lancet Child Survival Series, 13% of deaths of children
under the age of five could be prevented by breastfeeding alone.
Availability of breast milk to vulnerable infants can be increased
significantly by establishing human milk banks. However, providing safe
breast milk to infants in developing regions continues to be a challenge.
Commercial-grade pasteurizers are too expensive and beyond the reach of
most organizations. Affordable, low-tech pasteurization methods lack the
appropriate quality control mechanisms, which prevents implementation at a
large-scale.

In this project we have leveraged mobile and sensing technologies to create
an alternate system to safely pasteurize human breast milk. The system,
called FoneAstra, enables low-level sensors like temperature probes, to be
connected to mobile phones. It ensures that milk is pasteurized correctly
by providing appropriate audiovisual feedback to guide users performing the
procedure. At the end of the procedure, users are able to print a
pasteurization report and labels for pasteurized milk bottles using a
Bluetooth-enabled printer. The system automatically uploads temperature
curves of procedures to a server, which enables supervisors to remotely
monitor facilities where procedures are performed.

The first trial of the system started in Durban, South Africa, in May 2012.
We have deployed it at two locations. First, it is being used to perform
routine pasteurizations at a milk bank located in the neonate ward of a
district-level hospital. Second, our in-country partners in the pediatrics
department of the University of KwaZulu-Natal, are using it to validate the
efficacy of the system by doing microbial activity tests on pre- and
post-pasteurized milk samples. The results received so far have been
encouraging – while pre-pasteurized milk samples showed microbial activity,
none of the post-pasteurized samples showed any microbial activity. The
system will be installed at two new milk banks in Durban in the coming
months. Our in-country partners are also promoting the system with the
South African Dept. of Health, who are in the process of scaling up milk
banking across the country, and are looking for alternate, affordable
methods to safely pasteurize human breast milk.

Rohit Chaudhri is a PhD student in the Change group at the University of
Washington.

What: Rohit Chaudhri on the Human Milkbank Project.

When: Tuesday, February 5th at 12 noon.

Where: The Allen Center, CSE 203
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