HospiMedica

Download Mobile App
Recent News AI Critical Care Surgical Techniques Patient Care Health IT Point of Care Business Focus

NIFTY Cup Aids Infants Who Cannot Breastfeed

By HospiMedica International staff writers
Posted on 29 Sep 2015
Print article
Image: The NIFTY cup (Photo courtesy of PATH).
Image: The NIFTY cup (Photo courtesy of PATH).
A novel cup has been designed to facilitate feeding and prevent starvation in infants in developing countries who are unable to breastfeed.

The Neonatal Intuitive Feeding TechnologY (NIFTY) cup, developed at Seattle Children's Hospital (WA, USA), PATH (Seattle, WA, USA), and the University of Washington (Seattle, USA) is designed to mimic breastfeeding. Key features include an extended reservoir off the lip of the cup made of a durable, soft silicone material that holds a small amount of milk, ensuring efficient delivery where the infant is able to pace feeding on its own. Mothers can directly express their breast milk into the 60-mL cup, reducing possible cross-contamination from other containers.

The quick-drying, UV-resistant, silicone cup can be boiled for sterilization, and is ergonomically designed to enhance finger and wrist control over milk flow. An embossed measurement scale helps keep track volume and intake of milk. The first prototype of the NIFTY cup was evaluated in Southern India with infants that had clefts or were born prematurely. The feedback was used to help refine the cup’s design, spearheaded by Christy McKinney, PhD, MPH, of the University of Washington, who was instrumental in designing the NIFTY cup.

“Our collaborative team has worked tirelessly with modest funding for the last five years to realize this vision, so it is wonderful to have the NIFTY cup recognized in this way,” said Patricia Coffey, PhD, MPH, leader of the Health Technologies for Women and Children group at PATH. “We are confident that we have a great team in place to move the product through validation as quickly as possible and into the hands of those who need it.”

Each year, approximately nine million babies in Africa and South Asia have difficulties breastfeeding because they are either premature, have craniofacial anomalies like cleft lip and palate, or are born to mothers who die of birth-related causes, putting these infants at risk of dying from starvation. The World Health Organization (WHO, Geneva, Switzerland) recommends the use of a small cup to feed these newborns in low-resource settings, but there is no standard feeding tool in existence.

Related Links:

Seattle Children's Hospital
PATH
University of Washington



Gold Member
STI Test
Vivalytic Sexually Transmitted Infection (STI) Array
Gold Member
POC Blood Gas Analyzer
Stat Profile Prime Plus
New
Transportation Stretcher
ES709
New
4K-3D NIR/ICG Video Endoscope
TIPCAM 1 Rubina

Print article

Channels

Critical Care

view channel
Image: The Atmo Gas Capsule measures gases as it travels through the GI tract and transmits the data wirelessly (Photo courtesy of Atmo Biosciences)

Ingestible Smart Capsule for Chemical Sensing in the Gut Moves Closer to Market

Intestinal gases are associated with several health conditions, including colon cancer, irritable bowel syndrome, and inflammatory bowel disease, and they have the potential to serve as crucial biomarkers... Read more

Surgical Techniques

view channel
Image: The Elana Heart Bypass System is designed to make suturing obsolete (Photo courtesy of AMT Medical)

Pioneering Sutureless Coronary Bypass Technology to Eliminate Open-Chest Procedures

In patients with coronary artery disease, certain blood vessels may be narrowed or blocked, requiring a stent or a bypass (also known as diversion) to restore blood flow to the heart. Bypass surgeries... Read more