Social:Human placentophagy

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Short description: Postpartum eating of human placenta
Dried human placenta as medicine - Ziheche (紫河车)

Human placentophagy, or consumption of the placenta, is defined as "the ingestion of a human placenta postpartum, at any time, by any person, either in raw or altered (e.g., cooked, dried, steeped in liquid) form".[1] While there are several anecdotes of different cultures practicing placentophagy in varying contexts, maternal placentophagy started in the US in the 1970s, with little to no evidence of its practice in any traditional or historic culture.[2] Midwives and alternative-health advocates in the U.S. are the primary groups encouraging post-partum maternal placentophagy.[1]

Maternal placentophagy has a small following in Western cultures,[3] fostered by celebrities like January Jones.[4] The placenta has high protein, rich iron and nutrient content, but there is inconclusive scientific evidence about any health benefit to its consumption.[5] The risks of human placentophagy are also still unclear,[6] but there has been one confirmed case of an infant needing hospitalization due to a group B strep blood infection tied to their mother's consumption of placenta capsules.[7]

Placentophagy can be divided into two categories, maternal placentophagy and non-maternal placentophagy.

Maternal placentophagy

Maternal placentophagy is defined as "a mother’s ingestion of her own placenta postpartum, in any form, at any time".[1] Of the more than 4000 species of placental mammals, most, including herbivores, regularly engage in maternal placentophagy, thought to be an instinct to hide any trace of childbirth from predators in the wild. The exceptions to placentophagy include mainly humans, Pinnipedia, Cetacea, and camels.[1]

Non-maternal placentophagy

Non-maternal placentophagy is defined as "the ingestion of the placenta by any person other than the mother, at any time".[1] Such instances of placentophagy have been attributed to the following: a shift toward carnivorousness at parturition, specific hunger, and general hunger. With most Eutherian mammals, the placenta is consumed postpartum by the mother. Historically, humans more commonly consume the placenta of another woman under special circumstances.[1]

Historical occurrences of human placentophagy

In a 1979 volume of the Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine, William Ober's article "Notes on Placentophagy" evaluates the possibility that certain ancient cultures that practiced human sacrifice may also have practiced human placentophagy, including Egyptians, Tasians, Badarians, Amrateans, Gerzeans, Semainians.[8] However, a 2010 survey of 179 societies found that none practices placentophagy regularly.[1] A 2007 study similarly found that placentophagy has never been described as a culturally normative practice in any historical source.[9]

Placentophagy might have occurred during the Siege of Jerusalem (587 BC), due to the excessive famine experienced by the Judeans, according to scholar Jack Miles in his Pulitzer Prize-winning God: A Biography.[10] Miles argues that the curse in Deuteronomy 28:56–57, written in the form of prophecy, is far too vivid not to have been seen personally by the author of the verses.

Decline of maternal placentophagy in humans

From an evolutionary perspective, it appears that the human species must have stopped practicing maternal placentophagy at a fairly early stage, since there is no evidence that it has ever been common. One hypothesis that has been offered is that the smoke of firewood caused environmental toxins to accumulate in the placenta, leading to harmful health outcomes for prehistoric mothers who stayed close to the community hearth and ate their placentas. However, there is no direct evidence for a taboo against placentophagy in human myth. The shift away from placentophagy may have occurred over one million years before present.[11]

Traditional medicine

Human placenta has been used traditionally in Chinese medicine, though the mother is not identified as the recipient of these treatments.[1] A sixteenth-century Chinese medical text, the Compendium of Materia Medica, states in a section on medical uses of the placenta that, "when a woman in Liuqiu has a baby, the placenta is eaten", and that in Bagui, "the placenta of a boy is specially prepared and eaten by the mother’s family and relatives."[1] Another Chinese medical text, the Great Pharmacopoeia of 1596, recommends placental tissue mixed with human milk to help overcome the effects of Ch'i exhaustion.[8] Dried, powdered placenta would be stirred into three wine-cups of milk to make a Connected Destiny Elixir.[8] The elixir would be warmed in sunlight, then taken as treatment.[8] It is not known exactly how traditional this remedy was, nor exactly how far back it dates.[8]

In Jamaica, bits of placental membranes were put into an infant's tea to prevent convulsions caused by ghosts.[8] In ancient Egypt, as well, pieces of placenta were soaked in milk and fed to the infant to test for infant mortality.[12]

The Chaga of Tanganyika place the placenta in a receptacle for two months to dry. Once dry, it is ground into flour from which a porridge is made. The porridge is served to old women of the family as a way of preserving the child's life.[8]

In Central India, women of the Kol Tribe eat placenta to aid reproductive function. It is believed that consumption of placenta by a childless woman "may dispel the influences that keep her barren".[8]

The Kurtachi of the Solomon Islands mixed placenta into the mother's supply of powdered lime for chewing with the areca nut.[8]

In the Maremma region of Italy it was at one time common to mix pieces of placenta into the food of a new mother without her knowledge, to promote a healthy flow of milk.[13][14]

Cultural and spiritual beliefs

Beliefs behind the practices of consuming the placenta, whether in part or in whole, commonly reflect acknowledgment for the vast work of this organ for the baby in utero, serving as its 'protector' and providing critical vital functions for the baby before birth. The placenta can be seen as the Tree of Life, as a genetic 'twin' to the fetus, an angel, and reasons for ingesting the placenta may reflect spiritual beliefs as much as the pragmatic ones listed above.[15] Traditional practices to revere and honor the placenta that do not include consumption may include placenta burial, such as in Saudi Arabia.[16] Such traditions reflect human birthing practices wherein umbilical cords may not have been severed while the cord is still pulsing, avoiding blood loss and infection, and may include practices that retain the placental connection until after it has been delivered and the baby is already nursing.

Modern placentophagy

A slice of placenta, being prepared for consumption.

Modern practice of placentophagy is rare, as most contemporary human cultures do not promote its consumption.[1] Placentophagy did receive popular culture attention in 2012, however, when American actress January Jones credited eating her placenta as helping her get back to work on the set of Mad Men after just six weeks.[4]

Instances of placentophagy have been recorded among certain modern cultures. In the 1960s "male and female Vietnamese nurses and midwives of Chinese and Thai background consum[ed] the placentas of their young, healthy patients" for reasons unspecified, as reported by a Czechoslovakian medical officer in at the Hospital of Czechoslovak-Vietnamese Friendship in Haiphong.[1] Placentas were stripped of their membranous parts and fried with onions before being eaten.[8]

A more recent cross-cultural ethnographic study by researchers at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas surveyed 179 contemporary human societies, and identified only one culture (Chicano, or Mexican-American) that mentioned the practice of maternal placentophagy.[1] This account, centering on Chicano and Anglo midwifery in San Antonio, Texas, stated, "cooking and eating part of the placenta has…been reported by a couple of midwives. One Anglo mother ... was reported to have roasted the placenta."[1] This instance, however, may not be indicative of any larger cultural trends, as no other records of placentophagy were found in the Chicano culture. This same study also recorded three references of non-maternal placentophagy:

Placenta prepared in a stir-fry with broccoli
  • Traditional Gullah medicine dictates that when a baby is born with a caul, with amniotic membranes over the face at birth, the placenta is made into a tea and then consumed by the child to "prevent them from seeing spirits that would otherwise haunt [them]".[1]
  • Practice of paternal placentophagy was identified in the Malekula of Melanesia. "In Espiritu Santo, the new father [eats] a pudding made from the cooked placenta and blood."[1]
  • Oral administration of the placenta was reported in Sino-Vietnamese medicine to aid the recovery of those suffering from tuberculosis.[1]

In a follow-up study, the UNLV researchers were joined by colleagues at the University of South Florida, and surveyed women who had engaged in maternal placentophagy previously. Of the 189 placentophagic women surveyed, the researchers found that 95 percent of participants had "positive" or "very positive" subjective experiences from eating their own placenta, citing beliefs of "improved mood", "increased energy", and "improved lactation".[17] [18] The authors themselves, however, state that "exceedingly little research has been conducted to assess these claims and no systematic analysis has been performed to evaluate the experiences of women who engage in this behavior." In the United States as many as 30% of women who planned community births may consume the placenta, often citing avoidance of postpartum depression as the reason.[19]

Recent examples of placentophagy in the popular media include Time Magazine’s "Afterbirth: It’s What’s for Dinner",[20] and USA Today’s "Ingesting the placenta: Is it healthy for new moms?"[21]

Current beliefs among placentophagists

During pregnancy, women often become iron deficient because iron is transported across the placenta to the fetus.[22] Because low levels of iron are known to negatively affect mood, researchers are exploring the possible link between iron status and PPD.[22] Placentophagy advocates claim that the placenta provides an excellent source of dietary iron, and may therefore improve maternal postpartum iron status. However, a recent randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled pilot study conducted by researchers at UNLV found that consuming a commonly recommended daily intake of encapsulated placenta (approximately 3,000 mg per day) only provides about one-quarter of the RDA for iron for lactating women. The study found no differences in maternal iron status over a three-week postpartum period between women consuming 3300 mg/day of cooked, encapsulated placenta, and study participants taking a beef "placebo".[23]

Preparation

In many areas placenta encapsulation specialists can be found to professionally prepare the placenta for consumption. Also, many online alternative health sources give instructions for preparing it personally. One common method of preparation is encapsulation. The encapsulation process can be one of two ways: steamed or raw. With the steamed encapsulation process, the placenta is gently steamed with various herbs (ginger, lemon, frankincense, myrrh, etc.), then fully dehydrated, ground into a fine powder, and put into capsules. The raw method does not involve steaming first. The placenta will be fully dehydrated, then ground and put into capsules.[24]

Controversy

Many researchers remain skeptical of whether the practice of placentophagy is of value to humans. A 2015 review of the last 64 years of placentophagy research found that while a minority of women in western countries perceive placentophagy as reducing the risk of postpartum depression and enhancing recovery, there is really no evidence that this is the case.[6] The same study also found inconclusive evidence that placentophagy was of any benefit to facilitating uterine contraction, resumption of normal cyclic estrogen cycle, and milk production. As well, the authors stated that the risks of placentophagy also warrant more investigation. A researcher who had previously researched why animals eat their placentas stated in 2007 that "people can believe what they want, but there’s no research to substantiate claims of human benefit. The cooking process will destroy all the protein and hormones. Drying it out or freezing it would destroy other things."[21] UNLV researchers found that some essential nutrients and steroid hormones remained in human placenta that was cooked and processed for encapsulation and consumption.[25][26]

Although human placentophagy entails the consumption of human tissue by a human or humans, its status as cannibalism is debated.[27][28]

See also

References

  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 Young, Sharon; Benyshek, Daniel (2010). "In Search of Human Placentophagy: A Cross-Cultural Survey of Human Placenta Consumption, Disposal Practices, and Cultural Beliefs". Ecology of Food and Nutrition 49 (6): 467–84. doi:10.1080/03670244.2010.524106. PMID 21888574. 
  2. Young, Sharon M. (2010). "In Search of Human Placentophagy: A Cross-Cultural Survey of Human Placenta Consumption, Disposal Practices, and Cultural Beliefs". Ecology of Food and Nutrition 49 (6): 467–484. doi:10.1080/03670244.2010.524106. PMID 21888574. http://www.naturalnurturer.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/searchforhumanplacentophagy.pdf. 
  3. Beacock, Michelle (2012-07-01). "Does eating placenta offer postpartum health benefits?". British Journal of Midwifery 20 (7): 464–469. doi:10.12968/bjom.2012.20.7.464. ISSN 0969-4900. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 "January Jones Eats Her Own Placenta". https://abcnews.go.com/blogs/health/2012/03/26/mad-mom-january-jones-eats-her-own-placenta/. 
  5. Pratt, J.P.; Roderuck, Charlotte; Coryell, Margaret; Macy, Icie G. (1946-11-01). "Composition of the human placenta: III Vitamin content" (in en). American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 52 (5): 783–787. doi:10.1016/0002-9378(46)90185-8. ISSN 0002-9378. PMID 20273858. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 Coyle, CW; Hulse, KE; Wisner, KL; Driscoll, KE; Clark, CT (October 2015). "Placentophagy: therapeutic miracle or myth?". Archives of Women's Mental Health 18 (5): 673–80. doi:10.1007/s00737-015-0538-8. PMID 26043976. 
  7. Buser, Genevieve; et, al (June 30, 2017). "Notes from the Field: Late-Onset Infant Group B Streptococcus Infection Associated with Maternal Consumption of Capsules Containing Dehydrated Placenta — Oregon, 2016". Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 66 (25): 677–678. doi:10.15585/mmwr.mm6625a4. PMID 28662016. PMC 5687501. https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/66/wr/mm6625a4.htm. 
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 8.6 8.7 8.8 8.9 Ober, William B. (1979). "Notes on Placentophagy". Journal of Urban Health 55 (6): 591–99. PMID 111747. 
  9. Menges, Maria (2007). "Evolutionsbiologische Aspekte der Plazentophagie Evolutional and biological aspects of placentophagia". Anthropologischer Anzeiger 65 (1): 97–108. doi:10.1127/anthranz/65/2007/97. ISSN 0003-5548. https://www.jstor.org/stable/29542795. 
  10. Miles, Jack (2011). God: A Biography. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. p. 146. ISBN 9780307789136. https://books.google.com/books?id=7Y7c6XwOI68C&q=%22god%3A%20a%20biography%22%20%2B%20afterbirth&pg=PA146. "The sickening image of a woman fighting with her husband and children over who will eat her afterbirth is just the kind of unimaginable detail that only the actual experience can provide a writer." 
  11. Young, Sharon M.; Benyshek, Daniel C.; Lienard, Pierre (May 2012). "The Conspicuous Absence of Placenta Consumption in Human Postpartum Females: The Fire Hypothesis". Ecology of Food and Nutrition 51 (3): 198–217. doi:10.1080/03670244.2012.661349. PMID 22632060. 
  12. Das Candeias Sales, José (2006). "Amamentar no Egipto antigo: do prazer na relação materno-infantil à ideologia". Estudos Orientais 9: 80. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/262411805. 
  13. Bellucci, Giuseppe (1910). "La placenta nelle tradizioni italiane e nell'etnografia". Archivio per l'Antropologia e la Etnologia 15 (3–4). http://www.amantropologiamedica.unipg.it/index.php/am/article/view/16. 
  14. Ploss, H., Bartels, M. & Bartels, P. (1927): Das Weib in der Natur- und Völkerkunde, Bd. 2; hrsg. von F. v. Reitzenstein. - Neufeld & Henius Verlag, Berlin, S. 844
  15. Lim, Robin (2015-04-08). Placenta : the forgotten chakra. Akiyama, Miyuki (Revised ed.). Bali, Indonesia. pp. 122, 128. ISBN 978-0976290773. OCLC 951498666. 
  16. "Horizon: the Nine Months That Made You (BBC 2)" (in en). https://www.newstatesman.com/television/2011/08/horizon-months-placenta-during. 
  17. Bawany, Afsha (February 27, 2013). "Steamed, Dehydrated or Raw: Placentas May Help Moms' Post-Partum Health. UNLV anthropology survey examines why women consume their placentas after childbirth.". UNLV News Center. http://news.unlv.edu/article/steamed-dehydrated-or-raw-placentas-may-help-moms%E2%80%99-post-partum-health. 
  18. "Human Maternal Placentophagy: A Survey of Self-Reported Motivations and Experiences Associated with Placenta Consumption". Ecology of Food and Nutrition. http://news.unlv.edu/sites/default/files/EFN%20Placentophagy%20Survey%20(Selander,%20Cantor,%20Young%20and%20Benyshek%202013).pdf. 
  19. Benyshek, Daniel C.; Cheyney, Melissa; Brown, Jennifer; Bovbjerg, Marit L. (December 2018). "Placentophagy among women planning community births in the United States: Frequency, rationale, and associated neonatal outcomes". Birth (Berkeley, Calif.) 45 (4): 459–468. doi:10.1111/birt.12354. ISSN 1523-536X. PMID 29722066. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29722066. 
  20. Stein, Joel (3 July 2009). "Afterbirth: It's What's For Dinner". Time Magazine. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1908442,00.html. Retrieved 5 December 2011. 
  21. 21.0 21.1 Freiss, Steve (19 July 2007). "Ingesting the Placenta: Is It Healthy for New Moms?". USA Today. https://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2007-07-18-placenta-ingestion_N.htm. 
  22. 22.0 22.1 Marraccini, Marisa E.; Gorman, Kathleen S. (2015). "Exploring Placentophagy in Humans: Problems and Recommendations" (in en). Journal of Midwifery & Women's Health 60 (4): 371–379. doi:10.1111/jmwh.12309. ISSN 1542-2011. PMID 26255799. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/jmwh.12309. 
  23. Gryder, Laura (2017). "Effects of Human Maternal Placentophagy on Maternal Postpartum Iron-Status: A Randomized, Double Blind, Placebo Controlled Pilot Study". Journal of Midwifery and Women's Health 62 (1): 68–79. doi:10.1111/jmwh.12549. PMID 27809380. 
  24. Johnson, Sophia K.; Groten, Tanja; Pastuschek, Jana; Rödel, Jürgen; Sammer, Ulrike; Markert, Udo R. (2018-07-01). "Human placentophagy: Effects of dehydration and steaming on hormones, metals and bacteria in placental tissue" (in en). Placenta 67: 8–14. doi:10.1016/j.placenta.2018.05.006. ISSN 0143-4004. PMID 29941176. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0143400418302339. 
  25. Young, SM; Gryder, L; David, W; Teng, Y; Gerstenberger, S; Benyshek, DC (2016). "Human Placenta Processed for Encapsulation Contains Modest Concentrations of Fourteen Trace Minerals and Elements". Nutrition Research 36 (8): 872–878. doi:10.1016/j.nutres.2016.04.005. PMID 27440542. 
  26. Young; Gryder, SM LK; Zava, D; Kimball, DW; Benyshek, DC (2016). "Presence and Concentration of 17 Hormones in Human Placenta Processed for Encapsulation and Consumption". Placenta 43: 86–89. doi:10.1016/j.placenta.2016.05.005. PMID 27324105. 
  27. Hall, Harriet. Eating Placentas: Cannibalism, Recycling, or Health Food? Science-Based Medicine, March 8, 2011
  28. Watson-Smyth, Kate. Placenta chef accused of cannibalism. The Independent, 22 January 1998

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