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Friday 14 September 2018

Eating My Placenta Helped Me Avoid Postpartum Depression – John Legend’s Wife Chrissy Teigen Tells Her Fans


Eating the placenta does not prevent postpartum depression, health officials warn.

But Chrissy Teigen has joined the legions of celebrities who insist it worked for them.

The 32-year-old, who gave birth for the second time to son Miles Theodore in May, told CBS that she felt much happier this time, and she puts it down to eating her own organ.   

She is hardly the first to say so. Kim and Kourtney Kardashian, Tia and Tamera Mowry, Katherine Heigl, January Jones, Alicia Silverstone, Holly Madison, Nikki Reed, Blac Chyna, Padma Lakshmi, Kim Zolciak, and Samantha Bee are all part of the exhaustive list of famous women that have recommended it.   

However, scientists insist there is little evidence to back the fad, though there are plenty of risks. 



Last fall, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released a report that a newborn developed life-threatening blood poisoning passed on from its mother when she took bacteria-contaminated pills.

Weeks later, researchers at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, published research showing it had absolutely no impact on a mother's mental health.

Supporters of the practice often claim the organ contains valuable vitamins and hormones that could prevent postpartum depression.
The 32-year-old, who gave birth for the second time to son Miles Theodore in May, told CBS that she felt much happier this time, and she puts it down to eating her own organ
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Researchers from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, analyzed 12 women who took placenta capsules and 15 who had placebo pills after giving birth. 

They investigated the placenta capsules' health effects, including their ability to prevent postpartum depression.

The findings were published in the journal Women and Birth. 

Results reveal placenta capsules do not decrease a new mother's risk of postpartum depression.  

Study author Professor Daniel Benyshek, said: 'Our results might be seen as proof that placentophagy doesn't "really work" because we did not find the type of clear, robust differences in maternal hormone levels or postpartum mood between the placenta group and placebo group that these types of studies are designed to detect.'

Yet the findings did show consuming the placenta influences women's hormones, which could potentially have some benefits.   

Lead author Dr Sharon Young said: 'While the study doesn't provide firm support for or against the claims about the benefits of placentophagy, it does shed light on this much debated topic by providing the first results from a clinical trial specifically testing the impact of placenta supplements on postpartum hormones, mood, and energy.

'What we have uncovered are interesting areas for future exploration, such as small impacts on hormone levels for women taking placenta capsules, and small improvements in mood and fatigue in the placenta group.' 

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