Why eat a placenta?

Apr 20, 2006 19:45

Tom Cruise made the front pages by joking that he was going to eat the placenta when his fiancee gave birth. Are there really any medical benefits to eating a placenta?

Into the roasting pan, put one onion, red pepper, tomato sauce, bay leaves, pepper, salt and a clove of garlic... and 1 to 3lbs of placenta.

Is this recipe for cooking a placenta a wholesome idea, feeding the new mother in the way nature intended? Or is it something that seems very unnatural and more likely to inspire queasiness than post-birth nourishment?

The issue of eating the placenta - the afterbirth delivered from a mother following the birth of a baby - has been sparked again by front-page reports that Hollywood star Tom Cruise had been planning to eat the placenta when his fiancee gave birth.


Although in an interview with a US television news network, Cruise denied such a suggestion.

Young wives' tale

But there has been a longstanding belief among some new mothers that eating the placenta can yield benefits.

One supposed reason is that it can reduce the incidence of post-natal depression. It has also been claimed to have nutritional properties needed by women after childbirth.

But consultant obstetrician Maggie Blott dismisses the post-natal depression theory. In fact, says Dr Blott, a spokeswoman for the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, there's no medical justification at all.

"Animals eat their placenta to get nutrition - but when people are already well-nourished, there is no benefit, there is no reason to do it," she says.

'Placentophagia'

In two decades of medical practice, she says only a handful of women have taken home their placenta to eat, while others have used them in symbolic garden burials.

If the most usual way of treating the placenta in the West is to incinerate it, there are other cultures in which it has a special place in rituals following a birth.

In Hawaii, there have been legal moves in recent weeks to give parents the right to take home a placenta from hospital - because of a native Hawaiian belief that the placenta is part of the child.

There is a Hawaiian tradition that the placenta should be planted with a tree, which would then grow alongside the child - and parents have been angered when hospitals have obstructed them from taking the placenta.

If "placentophagia" - the practice of eating the placenta - remains a minority activity, there have been other applications.

How about placenta art? Pregnancy websites have some handy hints for mothers-to-be about how they could use their placenta in making prints, using the placenta to make patterns on paper.

"Many parents have found this to be a fun activity as well as giving them a very unique, artistic keepsake of their pregnancy," suggests one of these online parenting guides.

childbirth, urban myths, cannibalism, scientology

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