Reasons to Think Twice About Eating Your Placenta After Giving Birth

Woman holding newborn baby in hospital bed

NataliaDeriabina / Getty Images

Eating one's placenta is known as placentophagy. It is practiced by most mammals in the animal world, including many primates. This excludes the majority of humans, although it is done by some. Women have been known to cook placenta, dehydrate it and turn it into edible powders, blend it into smoothies—even eat it raw.

There are some who say that eating human placenta can help with health concerns, both pregnancy-related and otherwise. The placenta is high in progesterone and has a small amount of oxytocin (the "feel good" hormone). Some midwives and doctors use placenta medicinally after a woman gives birth to help with issues from postpartum depression to postpartum hemorrhage; placenta supposedly helps stem bleeding after birth and causes the uterus to clean itself out.

Some also believe that using the placenta in any form after birth can help alleviate pain. Certain forms of Chinese medicine also involve the use of parts of human placenta.

Is Eating Your Own Placenta Safe?

Eating your own placenta (in any form) is discouraged, as there is limited evidence to conclusively support its safety. This is not an area that has been significantly researched by the medical community.

In addition, your placenta may filter and trap harmful substances away from your baby during pregnancy, meaning you may be exposed to large concentrations of them if you eat your placenta. Placenta is also subject to spoilage, which can pose its own set of risks.

Importantly, remember that—if you are breastfeeding—what goes into your body has the potential to affect more than just your health. Little ones are far more susceptible, for example, to bacteria that eating placenta may introduce.

Though the decision to consume your own placenta should be made with caution, never eat someone else's placenta, as illnesses that can be transmitted by blood—hepatitis, HIV, etc.—may potentially be present.

What About Placenta Encapsulation?

While some women eat placenta cooked or raw, placenta encapsulation—dehydrating placenta to turn it into pills—is more common these days.

According to the American Pregnancy Association (APA), support for this practice comes mainly from anecdotes, not from research, which is very thin. Furthermore, the APA says that some women who have consumed their placenta in pill form have reported symptoms such as dizziness and jitteriness.

Placenta encapsulation can be done by the mother or family, but people more often turn to services that do this for them. While there are multiple training programs on how to encapsulate a placenta available, this is not a regulated practice or industry. It's important to consider the risks associated with having your placenta "processed" by a service that does the same for other women, including cross-contamination.

A case of an infant becoming infected with group B streptococcus, likely due to its mother's consumption of encapsulated placenta, says the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), got national attention in 2017.

Although it is difficult to draw conclusions from one particular incident, this case heightened awareness of potential risks of this practice and raised a larger discussion about the consumption of placenta in any form. The process of placenta encapsulation does not eradicate all potential pathogenic organisms from the placenta.

Safer Options for What to Do With Your Placenta

Some families choose to commemorate a birth and "honor" the placenta itself by burying it under a tree or by creating art projects, like a placenta print. These are safer options for you and your baby, although state and local laws may restrict what you can do when it comes to the outdoors.

Regardless, if you take your placenta home and later need to dispose of it, do not simply throw it away. Consult a hospital or a medical waste company to ensure safe disposal.

3 Sources
Verywell Family uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
  1. Johnson SK, Pastuschek J, Rödel J, Markert UR, Groten T. Placenta - Worth Trying? Human Maternal Placentophagia: Possible Benefit and Potential RisksGeburtshilfe Frauenheilkd. 2018;78(9):846–852. doi:10.1055/a-0674-6275


  2. American Pregnancy Association. Placenta Encapsulation.


  3. Buser GL, Mató S, Zhang AY, Metcalf BJ, Beall B, Thomas AR. Notes from the Field: Late-Onset Infant Group B Streptococcus Infection Associated with Maternal Consumption of Capsules Containing Dehydrated Placenta - Oregon, 2016MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2017;66(25):677–678. doi:10.15585/mmwr.mm6625a4


By Robin Elise Weiss, PhD, MPH
Robin Elise Weiss, PhD, MPH is a professor, author, childbirth and postpartum educator, certified doula, and lactation counselor.