has any one done it on prior pregnancies? If so I have any questions...
How do you go about doing it?
If you didn't do it for one pregnancy but did it for subsequent one, did you notice a difference in milk production?
Did insurance cover it for you?
Who do you contact to do it for you?
TIA!
Re: Encapsulation
I haven't done it but I want to. My insurance doesn't cover it and I think most insurances don't. I've also heard it really helps woth postpartum depression so that's another plus.
@UnbreakableKimmySchmidt thank you. I will check that article out!
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00737-015-0538-8
https://www.mja.com.au/insight/2015/24/sue-ieraci-placenta-placebo
https://americanpregnancy.org/first-year-of-life/placental-encapsulation/
I only BFd DS for 6 weeks. I was younger (about to turn 21) when he was born and wanted to breastfeed but didn't have a lot of support. I also was a full time college student about to start grad school and I had a FT job. My supply was good but I felt like the odds were stacked against me.. I actually felt pressure to formula feed and I felt REALLY uncomfortable with BFing whenever other people were around. I'm hoping for another experience this time around and to BF but I'm still comfortable knowing that if something goes wrong with me for one reason or another, my DS is a hell-on-wheels brilliant kiddo who 'survived' formula just fine.
TL:DR - Every experience can be different, regardless I hope things go better for you this time around and you feel confident in whichever decisions need to be made to make little babe happy and healthy! That's what matters.
Thanks for posting that npr article. That was really interesting and a helpful perspective
The cost was not covered by insurance, but was included in my midwife's usual fee with my fourth. While we're aware that we could call basically any doula and find someone who could do it for us, my husband is actually the one who handled all of it when our fifth was born, and it wasn't that hard at all, just a little bit time consuming. I think the going rate in my area is two or three hundred; we definitely spent less than that for the added herbs, capsules, and encapsulation machine. The herbs we bought at a local store, the capsules and machine we got on Amazon. We just pulverized it in the blender we already had.
@NachosAndPeaches I too would like to see a double blind study. But wouldn't that suck to be the mom who wants to do it but is getting a placebo!
Then the widespread use of substances that never underwent any rigorous evaluation end up identifying problems. For example, Published last week in Medicine's most prestigious journal: https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMsa1504267
Publishing it now.
If you are in a clinical trial no one tells you you are in the placebo arm. Participants and physicians are usually blinded to what each participant is usually taking.
So what @NachosandPeaches was referring to above was that it could be that if you taking a placenta pill thinking it is going to cause benefits X, Y and Z; up to 30% of people will actually perceive benefits X, Y and Z even if the pill does nothing (the so called placebo effect). But only with a randomized clinical trial can you separate true effect from placebo effect.
I'm choosing delayed encapsulation so that there is less chance of it causing autism but i read that if you surround yourself with other people who did eat their own placenta, I will be protected by the " herd placenta immunity" and I won't have to eat my own because it's "poison ".
Because vaccines cause autism duh
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Nov siggy challenge: animals eating Thanksgiving food
Rhys - born 04.17.2013
Harry - born 04.18.2016
@pinottoparenthood beer sounds good...beer cookies, not so much.
In all seriousness, I don't know what I'm going to do when I have a job where people are easily offended. I'll probably pretend to have laryngitis...like permanently. This is why I can't work around kids!
Expecting Double Trouble, April 2016