Pasteurized milk is stored at -20°C and remains safe for months. Once thawed, it must be consumed within 24 hours to maintain its quality.
Yes, at Sarji Hospital, donor milk is pasteurized, tested, and stored under strict hygiene standards to ensure it’s safe and beneficial for newborns.
• Stress reduction and mood enhancement: Elevates the chemicals responsible for mood regulation, reduces cortisol levels, and promotes mental wellness.
• Cardiovascular health: Reduces high blood pressure, increases lung capacity, and enhances circulation.
• Pain management and rehabilitation: Reduces back pain, arthritis discomfort, and assists in post-injury rehabilitation.
• Neurological benefits: Enhances creativity, balance, and life quality in people suffering from movement disorders.
A human milk bank collects, screens, pasteurizes, and stores donated breast milk from healthy mothers to provide safe nutrition for premature or ill infants.
Yoga therapy is a customized approach focusing on movement, breathing, relaxation, and meditation. It aims to support each individual’s specific needs.
Sarji Hospitals provides the foremost specialized integrative yoga therapy in Shivamogga. Managed by experts, therapeutic yoga sessions uniquely meet the needs of individuals dealing with a persistent illness, recovering from surgery, or simply looking to enhance their mental health.
✅ Appropriate for all ages
✅ Enhances overall physical and mental wellness
✅ Aids in holistic healing
Yoga can be helpful for almost everyone, including mentally and physically healthy individuals as well as those living with chronic conditions, such as cardiovascular disease, diabetes, arthritis, breathing and even neurological disorders. It also helps those facing mental health challenges such as stress, anxiety, or PTSD. Practitioners of all ages and abilities can partake in modified versions of the yoga sessions.
Healthy lactating mothers can donate breast milk at Sarji Hospital after screening and counselling. Donations help save newborns in critical need.
Premature, low birth weight, or critically ill infants can receive donor breast milk with a doctor’s prescription and parental consent.