Experts slam Kourtney Kardashian for promoting ‘dangerous pseudoscience’ as she says her $400 placenta capsules ‘helps beat baby blues’

Doctors have accused Kourtney Kardashian of promoting ‘dangerous pseudoscience’ by claiming that a supplement made of its mixed placenta postpartum depression can help prevent.

On Thursday morning the mother of four children, who recently gave birth to her first child with new husband Travis Barker, an image of capsules of $ 400 that she claimed to ‘help’ after the birth.

She reported a series of benefits that ‘some report’, including ‘higher energy levels’, ‘improved binding experience with the baby’, ‘balanced mood and hormones’ and ‘smaller chance of baby blues and postpartum depression.’

The reality TV star also claimed that the product helped to reduce the uterus to the ‘size of before pregnancy’.

The supplements – made by Wellness brand Mommy Made Encapsulation – were made using the mixed placenta of a woman who just gave birth.

The brand claims to take the mother's placenta and put it in pills to provide the mother and the baby with nutrients

On Wednesday, Kourtney Kardashian claimed that placenta pills were ‘super useful’ for her postpartum repair – including the prevention of depression

This ensures’ a daily dietary supplement that is rich in vitamins, minerals, iron, proteins, stem cells and hormones, made by your body, for your body, “according to the company, which was founded by the California -based Juliane Corona, that that is not. A medical professional and has a diploma in business administration.

The ‘Naturally occurring elements’ promote healing, the website is, including:’Increased milk production, no baby blues, a lot of energy ‘and a feeling of’ general recovery to the body before the baby ‘.

Mommy Made Encapsulation claims that each placenta makes approximately 160 to 180 pills. The process costs $ 400.

The placenta is an organ that grows in the womb during pregnancy and supplies the fetus oxygen and nutrients. Some claim that the tissue is a powerhouse of essential goodness that offers a series of health benefits in consumption.

In conversation with DailyMail.com, medical experts are destructive about such products, as well as approval by celebrities.

Dr. Ellie Cannon, a general practitioner in Great Britain and specialist in pediatric health care, told DailyMail.com: ‘No professional practitioner in health care with some integrity would approve these pills.

‘There is no scientific basis for any advantage, physically or mentally.

Mommy Made Encapsulation asks $ 400 to take the mother's placenta, steam and make pills of it

Mommy Made Encapsulation asks $ 400 to take the mother’s placenta, steam and make pills of it

‘But even if prominent people say they can do things as postpartum depression, that is dangerous.

“There is a real risk that the public will choose to undergo this unproven, pseudoscientific treatment instead of looking for medical help.”

In the meantime, Dr. Ashfaq Khan, a midwife and gynecologist, also based in Great Britain, said There are ‘no scientific studies’ that suggest that consuming a placenta offers health benefits. This vision is reflected in different overview articles published in medical journals.

Consuming the placenta has long been a popular habit among rich and high -profile women.

Some even choose to eat it in its entirety. Specialized supplement companies throughout the US have surfaced everywhere in the US in recent years and offer a ‘placenta-encapsulator’ service.

The placenta is packed immediately after birth and sent to the company, which combines extracts from the organ with herbs and other natural fabrics to make supplements.

Teen Mom star Kailyn Lowry made the headlines last month when she placed a series of photos and videos on Instagram in which she mixed her placenta in a smoothie (below).

Her children also used the organ to do art and handicraft.

Experts have previously expressed concern about the possible risks of placenta supplements.

In 2017, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) warned against placement pills after a child in Oregon became infected with the bacteria group B-Streptococci.

Kourtney placed his support for placenta pills for the first time in 2015 and claimed that they were 'life-changing'

Kourtney placed his support for placenta pills for the first time in 2015 and claimed that they were ‘life-changing’

The 44-year-old welcomed her first child earlier this month with Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker

The 44-year-old welcomed her first child earlier this month with Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker

The Oregon Health Authority said that contaminated placenta pills that the mother could not have been properly sterilized – and probably caused the infection.

It is thought that the infection passed through the mother’s breast milk to the child, although this was not in favor of certainty in the report.

The report did not mention the company where the mother got the pills.

Mommy Made Encapsulation claims that the organ will be steamed for 30 minutes before it is mixed, so that “the placenta is stripped of every type of bacterium, virus or infection and it is safe to eat.”

Although data from mice show some provisional effects, experts have warned that there is no evidence that placenta pills have some benefits in people.

A review from 2015 in the magazine Archives of the mental health of women Discovered that “studies that investigate the placental consumption to facilitate the contraction of the uterus, the resumption of the normal cyclical estrogen cycle and milk production, do not give a definitive answer.”

And a review in the magazine Animals Discovered that preparing the placenta through methods such as steaming and drying could eliminate all potential health benefits.

They are also not regulated by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which means that there are no safety standards for the processing of the placenta.

“A company that promotes false, non-scientific medicines cannot be trusted to regulate something and is not at all safe health care,” said Dr. Cannon.

She added that every supposed benefit is probably a placebo effect-and that this is related to the fact that those who can pay the dazzling price tag will probably take other steps to protect their health.

“These women can afford childcare, healthy food and a membership of a gym, as well as other things that make parenthood easier,” she said.

“All these things also make it less likely that someone gets a postpartum depression or other complications.”

In the meantime, she says, women with fewer resources run the greatest chance of kicking in false health claims while looking for what is best for their baby.

“It is abuse of mothers in their most vulnerable circumstances,” she said.

This is not the first time that Kourtney Kardashian promotes Placenta pills.

In 2015, following the Birth of her third child Reign Aston Disick, sHe wrote on Instagram: ‘Nice … Placenta pills! No joke … I will be sad when my placenta pills are up. They are life -changing! #Vonelen #Lookitup. ‘

What are the dangers of eating placenta?

Consuming the placenta has become increasingly popular among new mothers because of the claimed benefits, such as a lower risk of getting postpartum depression and an increased mood and energy level.

But experts have said that it has no benefits if new mothers eat their placenta, and that it can even cause damage.

Health experts led by an obstetrician from the New York Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center in New York City last year analyzed dozens of investigations into placenta consumption.

They now advise midwives to discourage their patients the placenta in any form, according to the study published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

“As midwives it is important to tell the truth,” says Dr. Amos Grunebaum, main author and midwife. “And the truth is that it is potentially harmful and that there is no evidence that it is useful, so don’t do it.”

Experts fear that eating the organ can spread bacterial or viral infections.

In 2017, the American Centers for Disease Control and Prevention expressed their concern about the encapsulation of the placenta, which would turn the placenta into a pill.

According to a study of evidence by the Society of Obstetricians and Gynecologists or Canada, these processes are not regulated.

They wrote in the Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology Canada: ‘It is unclear whether potentially harmful substances or infectious organisms are sterilized and made non-infectious/non-harmful.

“There is also potential for cross -contamination and transfer of pathogens transferred by blood without the correct treatment and sterilization of equipment.”

A study from 2017 by the Medical University of Vienna showed that the placenta contains insufficient nutrients, such as zinc, iron and selenium, to improve women’s health.

It can also accumulate heavy metals that, according to the researchers, can cause epileptic seizures and life -threatening complications if they are taken.

Research author Dr. Alex Farr said: ‘Medically the placenta is a waste product. Most mammals eat the placenta after birth, but we can only guess why they do that. After the placenta is a genetic part of the newborn, eating the placenta borders cannibalism. “

The CDC used a woman’s case study that group B-Streptococci, a bacterial infection that is often found in the vagina, transferred to her baby via placenta capsules as an example of the risks.

They report that the company that produced the pills did not heat the placenta sufficiently to kill the bacteria, and that the substance was therefore transferred to her baby through the breast milk.

(Tagstotranslate) DailyMail