When I was pregnant with each of my two children, I remember being really confused about whether to bank my baby's cord blood or not. Nowadays, it seems women have another decision to make about their baby's placenta, as well: whether or not to eat it.
Apparently there's a booming business to be made in prepping newborn babies' afterbirth for their mothers' consumption. Sure, some women prefer the placenta cooked up and eaten according to gourmet recipes. Others like to have it turned into dried jerky. Still others swear by placenta smoothies. But increasingly, it seems, moms are availing themselves of a growing number of encapsulation services, which steam, slice, dehydrate, and grind the placenta into a powder, and then turn it into capsules for the mom (or dad, or anyone, I guess) to pop. "My customers don’t have to handle it or smell or taste it at all," one midwife who makes placenta capsules boasted to the Daily Mail.
Why would anyone do this, you ask?
Taking their cue from animals in nature (which often eat the placenta following birth, though it's unclear precisely why), placenta-eating enthusiasts -- those who practice placentophagy -- believe that consuming the afterbirth both enhances breast milk production for the mother and reduces her risk for developing postpartum depression. Many others, however, dispute those claims, contending that there's really no clear, proven health benefit to eating the placenta.
(One commenter responding to a New York magazine article about the phenomenon a few months ago called it "the ultimate locavore dining experience." Ha!)
Personally, I don't mean to judge -- if you want to eat your baby's placenta, go right ahead -- but the whole idea makes me feel pretty ill. (Admittedly, I'm pretty grossed out by organ meat from other animals, too.) I can see that eating the placenta in capsule form would alleviate some of this squeamishness, but not all of it. I suppose there's no harm, but something about it still doesn't sit quite right with me.
Would you ever consider eating your baby's placenta or do you find the concept flat-out nauseating?
Image via Brooks Elliott/Flickr
Do People Who Have Kids Deserve Special Treatment?
Controversy: Gwen Stefani Bleaches Her Son's Hair
A '50 Shades of Grey' Shortcut for Busy Moms
Latest on Baby in Washing Machine Case (VIDEO)
Are People Who Eat Organic Judgy & Mean?
A Dad's Perspective on Playdates
Bagged Salad Recall Sparks New Fears
Help Dying 4-Year-Old Fulfill His Bucket List (VIDEO)
Melissa McCarthy & Sandra Bullock's Buddy Cop Movie
Do Working Moms Have It Easy?
Your Morning Coffee Could Save Your Life
Join the Fight Against Toxic Kids' Products
8 Summery Sweet Popsicles You Can Make at Home
Guy Gets Chest Waxed on National TV (VIDEO)
14 Ways to Be a Happier Mom
Emma Lives with Severe Food Allergies
How to Pack a No-Waste Lunch
Memorial Day Survival Guide
Backstage at Mamma Mia! with Irene Bunis

Comments (35)
that is just gross!
Um...no thanks. I've eaten some pretty strange stuff in my life, but I draw the line at organs. And bugs.
I do not care what form it comes in, I refuse to eat anything that comes out of my vagina.. .I do not care how "good" it is for me!!!
While I don't judge moms that want to do this I'm fine with delayed cord clamping and then tossing the rest into the medical waste bin at my hospital.
yuck, i will pass. my dog eats up her babies poop, maybe mothers should start doing that too. it would save money, the environment, water and the animals do it!!!!!!!!
I have a nice big jar of placenta pills sitting in my fridge right now! There is absolutely no difference in taste between these pills and any other pills. I also have a placenta tincture for when the pills run out. Placebo effect or not, I'll take it!
My midwife has been talking to me about the capsule form for PPD. I don't know if I get myself to do it. It'll have to take some research. I'd be happy to plant a tree over it instead.