MILC
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The Manitoba Interdisciplinary Lactation Centre (MILC)
...is a research consortium dedicated to understanding the biological and societal factors that influence breastfeeding, and the mechanistic basis for the health benefits of human milk feeding for mothers and children. Launched in 2020, MILC is co-Directed by Dr. Meghan Azad and Dr. Nathan Nickel at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg, Canada.
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Our Vision
To be at the forefront of human milk and infant feeding research, and make it accessible to families, clinicians, and decision makers.

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The MILC Mission
To improve maternal, child and population health by fostering interdisciplinary collaborations and partnerships that support innovation, discovery, knowledge mobilization and policy development ​focused on human milk and infant feeding.

What is MILC?

The Manitoba Interdisciplinary Lactation Center (MILC) is a one-of-a-kind research consortium that combines a provincial infant feeding database and a human milk biorepository. Both are linked with a wealth of health and social services data at the Manitoba Population Research Data Repository.

​MILC provides unrivaled opportunities to conduct interdisciplinary research on:
  • The impact of policies on breastfeeding
  • The biology of human milk
  • The influence of social factors on breastfeeding biology and behaviours
  • The impact of breastfeeding and human milk on maternal, infant and child health, and healthcare spending
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Why study human milk?

  • Chronic diseases have reached epidemic proportions in Canada and globally. Rates of obesity, asthma, type 2 diabetes, heart disease and cancer are on the rise, accounting for the majority of healthcare spending.
  • Breastfeeding appears to be protective against these and other diseases, yet over 70% of Canadian infants do not meet international breastfeeding recommendations.
  • The reasons for these low breastfeeding rates are unclear, and we do not fully understand how breastfeeding and human milk influence maternal and infant health. Studying these issues will help us untangle whether the benefits of breastfeeding are driven by social factors or biology, or a combination of the two.
  • Answering these complex questions requires that researchers from different disciplines bring together information about infant feeding practices, the health and social status of mother-infant dyads, and the biological composition of human milk.

The MILC Biorepository

Current inventory: 1,100 breastmilk samples from 750 mothers living in Pakistan, Tanzania and Canada. 
Samples processed: over 5,700 to date!

The "Tree of Life Images" are used with permission from: keeponboobin, mirandamacneil, mel.styles2108, RubyPhan.
 MILC is supported by:
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© COPYRIGHT 2020. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
  • Home
  • About
    • Our Team
    • Our Partners
    • Our Advisory Board
    • Our Equipment
  • MILC Club
    • About & Members
    • Presentations
  • News
  • Resources
  • IMiC
    • About IMiC
    • The IMiC Team
  • DONATE MILK