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Published in: BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth 1/2020

01-12-2020 | Research article

Birth, attitudes and placentophagy: a thematic discourse analysis of discussions on UK parenting forums

Authors: Riley Botelle, Chris Willott

Published in: BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth | Issue 1/2020

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Abstract

Background

The post-partum consumption of the placenta by the mother (placentophagy) has been practiced since the 1970s in the global North and is seemingly increasing in popularity. Maternal placentophagy is not known to have been practiced in any other time period or culture, despite being near-ubiquitous in other placental mammals. An in-depth qualitative exploration as to the reasons for the practice, its increasing popularity and how it is narratively incorporated into discourses surrounding “ideal” natural and medical births are given in this paper.

Methods

1752 posts from 956 users across 85 threads from the parenting forums Mumsnet and Netmums were identified for inclusion. A thematic discourse analysis was performed using NVivo.

Results

Three main themes were identified: women recounted predominantly positive attitudes towards their own experiences of placentophagy, and they were respectful of others’ views and experiences; some had negative views, particularly around the concept of disgust, but again, they were respectful of others’ experiences. By far the most common method of consumption of the placenta was encapsulation.

Conclusions

This paper identifies the motivation for placentophagy to almost universally be for medical benefits, most commonly the prevention or treatment of post-natal depression (PND). Whilst disgust is a common reaction, discussion of risks is rare, and positive experiences outweigh negative ones. The increasing popularity of the practice is ascribed in part to the comparative palatability of encapsulation and the use of the internet to share resources and remove barriers. Parenting forums are important spaces to negotiate normative birth practices, including placentophagy, and act to build communities of women who value personal experience over medical evidence and highly value personal choice and bodily autonomy. Placentophagy is discussed in terms of its relation to natural and medical births with arguments being made using both discourses for and against the practice. This paper argues that placentophagy is practiced as a resistance to medicalisation as an assertion of control by the mother, whilst simultaneously being a medicalised phenomenon itself.
Footnotes
2
Netmums siteowner Sally Russell reported in 2006 that 40% of users were from low income families [25]. She further reported in 2012 that 19% of users had household incomes of less than £15,000 and 10% between £15,000 and £20,000 [26], which are considerably lower than the UK average household income of £28,400 [27].
 
3
There are two main methods of encapsulation, the difference between them being whether the placenta is steamed or not before being dehydrated, pulverized and encapsulated. Steamed encapsulation is also known as the “Traditional Chinese Method” (TCM), whilst non-steamed encapsulation is often referred to as “raw encapsulation”. Users of these forums largely did not specify which kind of encapsulation they were referring to.
 
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Metadata
Title
Birth, attitudes and placentophagy: a thematic discourse analysis of discussions on UK parenting forums
Authors
Riley Botelle
Chris Willott
Publication date
01-12-2020
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth / Issue 1/2020
Electronic ISSN: 1471-2393
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12884-020-2824-3

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