The Star Malaysia - Star2

Fancy a plate of placenta?

- Clueless Mad Men

HEALTH trends come and go, but one post-birth fad is gaining a foothold in the United States among some new mothers who extol the benefits of eating their own placentas.

Convinced it helps to boost energy, produce healthy milk and ward off postpartum depression, the practice is catching on among mothers who shun modern medicine for natural care, or Hollywood celebritie­s eager to adopt newage trends.

It is called “placentoph­agy”, and entails eating the iron-rich product after birth in any form – liquid, solid or packed into a pill.

The bloody, spongy organ provides the foetus with nutrients, oxygen and hormones via the umbilical cord during the 40-week gestation period.

Some midwives promote its nourishing virtues for mothers too.

“Placenta helps to restore your body with vitamins, minerals and hormones,” said midwife Claudia Booker.

“It does not rejuvenate you so you can go to parties ... it just restores you when you feel like a used machine,” she said.

Booker, a 65-year-old with cropped hair and tattooed ears, processes and prepares the vascular organ into a course of capsules lasting several weeks.

The process of turning placenta into pills is perhaps more familiar to cooks than scientists. She cleans it, presses the blood from it and steams it before placing it in a dehydrator overnight.

The dried placenta is then cut into strips and put in a coffee grinder to turn into a powder which she puts inside small capsules, a technique she learned from a Chinese acupunctur­ist.

There are no scientific studies on the number of new mothers partaking in the practice and fewer on its effects, but that has not prevented the trend from taking hold in some circles, including among A-listers.

star Alicia Silverston­e has tried it and swears by it. And

vixen January Jones tried it too, earning her the nickname “Mad Mum” in some American media.

The trend has even spawned cookbooks and a devoted army of recipe testers on mummy blogs who write about placenta lasagnas,

tacos or chocolate truffles.

Mother of seven, Catherine said she wanted to try it after giving birth to her last child. She chopped her placenta into cubes and blended it with almond milk, honey and blueberrie­s for an afterbirth smoothie. She opted for a pureed version to “disguise the taste”, she said, adding that she froze leftovers to be enjoyed later.

Placenta being a rare item, some mothers want to make sure none of it goes to waste.

For others, packing placenta nutrients into edible treats like chocolate truffles is preferable to taking vitamins.

“It seemed to be a good idea because I tend to forget to take my vitamins, but I don’t forget that I’m in the mood for chocolate!” said mother-of-three Melissa.

Booker maintains that the benefits of eating the placenta are also psychologi­cal, helping mothers to stave off postpartum depression that affects up to 19% of women in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“It is one of the pieces of the puzzle that helps you to decrease the emotional rollercoas­ter of the early postpartum period,” Booker said.

It is also believed to ease fatigue and anxiety in the tumultuous post-birth period, she added.

But researcher­s are only start-

ing to conduct comprehens­ive studies on the practice, which first emerged in the United States in the 1970s, according to Daniel Benyshek, a medical anthropolo­gist at the University of Nevada.

Americans are believed to be among the first to eat their own after birth, he said, though dried placenta has been long used in Chinese medicine, prized by healers for its curative qualities.

Others have examined the effect in mammals, most of which eat it after birth.

Psychologi­st Mark Kristal from the University at Buffalo found that mice experience less pain in the post-birth period if they eat their placenta.

But most studies about human benefits do not meet acceptable scientific standards, Benyshek said. Instead, most evidence is anecdotal.

“There is a lot of positive feedback from women, including women who experience­d postpartum depression,” he said.

Based on a survey of 189 women in 2013 conducted by Benyshek, 98% reported the effects of eating their own placenta as “positive”.

He is planning to release a full study this summer based on research from 30 women.

Scientific­ally proven or not, many are embracing placentoph­agy as an essential post-birth ritual. — AFP Relaxnews

 ??  ?? The practice of eating placentas is catching on in the united States as some new mothers are convinced that it helps to boost energy, produce healthy milk and ward off postpartum depression. photo: aFp
The practice of eating placentas is catching on in the united States as some new mothers are convinced that it helps to boost energy, produce healthy milk and ward off postpartum depression. photo: aFp

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