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SUNRISE HOSPITAL: Placenta befouled, mom told

With contamination, plan for consumption forsaken

A woman battling Sunrise Hospital to retrieve her placenta from a birth three weeks ago says she has been told the organ is contaminated and that she will have to get a court order if she wants the hospital to turn it over to her.

Anne Swanson, who said last week that she wants the placenta for its nutrients, said she has no intention of ingesting it now that she's been informed of the contamination.


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  • Swanson, 30, said she was told she had until May 15 to get the court order or the placenta would be destroyed. She and about a dozen other women stood Monday along Maryland Parkway outside Sunrise Hospital and Medical Center to rally in support of Swanson's efforts to retrieve her placenta.

    Some held signs reading "Help. Placenta Held Hostage" and "Free the Placenta."

    Placenta contents are said to provide relief to women suffering from postpartum depression. Swanson had hoped Jodi Selander, a North Las Vegas mother, would have taken her placenta and transformed it into pill form for consumption.

    With respect to the court order, Twinkle Chisholm, a spokeswoman for Sunrise Hospital, said Monday that she could not discuss specific patient issues because of federal law. She said, per Clark County regulations, Sunrise Hospital keeps placentas in cold storage for three days.

    If there is no request from a physician for the temporary organ, which transfers oxygen and nutrients from mother to the fetus during pregnancy, the placenta is disposed of, Chisholm said.

    Swanson said she plans to contact the American Civil Liberties Union and Planned Parenthood of Southern Nevada for help obtaining the court order.

    "This is just for the principle of the thing,'' Swanson said Monday holding her baby, Maxanne, in a olive-colored sling across her chest. "I plan to plant it now. That's what I want to do. It is a huge part of Maxanne's life. I want it.''

    The majority of women rallying with Swanson Monday had also ingested their placentas in some form. Most were either pregnant or holding the hands of small children.

    Initially, Swanson said, she was told that the placenta was considered a biohazard.

    Hospital officials said last week only in an extreme circumstance would a placenta be released to a patient because diseases, such as HIV or hepatitis could be spread. Neither Swanson nor her baby have HIV or hepatitis.

    During Monday's rally, Selander collected more than 30 names for a petition she plans to submit to Nevada legislators. The idea is to get a law written, and someday passed in Nevada, that would allow hospitals to release placentas to women who request them.

    "It happened in Hawaii. It could happen here,'' she said.

    Though causes of postpartum depression are unclear, experts believe a sudden decrease in hormone levels is to blame.

    During pregnancy, a woman's body produces more estrogen and progesterone than needed, and those excess hormones can build up in the placenta.

    Within 24 hours after childbirth, the woman's body stops producing large amounts of estrogen and progesterone.

    Traditionally, postpartum depression is treated with therapy or antidepressants. However, the belief in traditional Chinese medicine is that placentas can be used to treat postpartum depression because they contain excess hormones.

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    Report abuse

    H. Callaghan wrote on April 14, 2008 12:55 AM: "Contamination" is the term used for all clinical waste, ie, material from the body. It is not necessarily contaminated, but it does have the potential to be contaminated. Unless it is pus or gangrenous material, or similar, the only real way to know if it is contaminated, is to test it.


    Report abuse

    Alisa wrote on July 19, 2007 12:06 PM: http://www.lasvegassun.com/sunbin/stories/nevada/2007/jul/18/071810034.html
    Here's an update...


    Report abuse

    Lindsey wrote on July 19, 2007 10:36 AM: I don't see any reason to bully the hospital, they are doing what they are supposed to do! I work in a hospital and if an organ become contaminated (which is a lot easier than you think) they cannot allow it to go anywhere. The only thing that can change that is LAW. Hospital policy is that if you take anything from a patient, it is to be returned to them or a family member post-operatively, unless contaminated. Contamination could be placing the organ onto a permiable towel. The towel is sterile, but things can happen. I do agree that if this lady would like her placenta then she should get it, but with the contamination issue, she needs to go through the law and get a law written or changed, i think that would help future mothers receive the things they request.


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    Jill Komosinski wrote on July 13, 2007 10:24 AM: I am sad to hear of this womans ordeal,
    I am very interested in the healing properties of the placenta and feel we as westerners need to look to other methods for ailments. That said, I am also a registered nurse and If hospitals let everyone take their placenta, or other amputated body parts be it leg, finger, breast, they would be popping up on e-bay and such.
    We recently had a news story in our area that someone had obtained body parts from corpses and had them decorating their home. There needs to be some guidelines or something. I love the idea of planting placentas giving life to a tree of somthing that once gave life to a baby.


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    Jennifer wrote on June 27, 2007 04:32 AM: While I may not agree with the consumption of one's placenta (although it is a very interesting idea that warrants research), I do agree that a woman should be able to take her placenta home from the hospital. I find it very curious that this hospital will not allow it, and I wonder why..? Is there an update?


    Report abuse

    Shonna Rhein-Gariepy wrote on May 08, 2007 11:40 AM: Sunrise Hospital has managed to disrespect not only a new mother's wishes but to contaminate a part of her body that linked her and her newborn. How DARE Sunrise Hospital do something like this?! They may not agree with Ann's reasons for wanting her placenta but this smacks of a purposeful tainting just so if they could not stop her any other way they would stop her *this* way. I've said it before, will say it again: Sunrise Hospital is nothing but a petty bully putting a new mother with a history of post-partum depression through the ringer YET again for no other reason than because they can and because they FEAR what they cannot understand. Sunrise is making all sorts of untrue claims now as to why they refused and continue to refuse to release Ann's placenta to her - though why they are the ONLY hospital in town to do so speaks volumes about just how far the bully will go to maintain control over those they don't understand. How very sad, indeed.