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Pregnancy and Childbirth Pregnancy Basics

Can You Give Life Twice to Your Child?


Author:

Richard Clement, MD

Medical Consultant, Miami, FL

Medically Reviewed On: April 18, 2001

Introduction
Cell Therapy: Give a Second Life
Saving the Placenta/Cord Blood
How Is Placenta/Blood Cord Collected?
Is Placenta/Cord Collection and Storage Covered by Insurance?
Who’s Who of Placenta/Cord Blood Storage and Transplant
The Safety of Storing Placenta/Cord Blood
The Future of Using Placenta/Cord Blood
 

Introduction

The gift of life has been celebrated for centuries and with many customs. I recall from my position as a Medical Registrar in Obstetrics and Gynecology in Africa 20 years ago that women of different cultures and ethnicity had their own way to deliver babies. In our hospital in Ndola, Zambia, we had 35 deliveries a night. Some of the mothers were Whites, some were East Indians, and most were Africans.

The White mothers were quite reserved with their screams and pain, and they took a long time to deliver. The East Indian women were very verbal and required the presence of many members of their family around them in the delivery ward. Most of the African women delivered quickly and easily, sometimes insisting on delivering in a squatting position. While I had had some experience in European OB-GYN, the number of deliveries in Ndola gave me a unique experience. I witnessed and shared the pain and happiness of the new mothers, and was also confronted by unusual events.

I heard stories of mothers biting their own umbilical cords to separate from their newborn when they delivered in the bush and were far from medical assistance. In the Ndola hospital, I witnessed some unusual uses of the placenta. One of our colleagues from the dermatology unit used to collect the fresh placenta, which he would then apply to chronic leg ulcers of his elderly patients. The technique gave excellent results and was very inexpensive. He was never sued, as there was no acknowledgement on his part of the risk of cross-infection, but additionally, there was no hospital board and very few lawyers in Ndola.

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