Doctors warn of demand
for 'vaginal seeding' despite thin evidence
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[February 24, 2016]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - British doctors say more
parents are requesting so-called "vaginal seeding", when a swab from the
mother's vagina is wiped into a newborn's mouth after caesarean-section
birth, despite a lack of evidence for its medical benefits.
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The practice, also known as microbirthing, involves wiping the swab
over the baby's mouth, eyes, face and skin to bring it into contact
with bacteria from the birth canal.
The hope is this may boost their gut bacteria, and reduce risk of
conditions such as allergies or obesity, experts explained in a
report in the BMJ British Medical Journal - yet scientific evidence
to support it is severely lacking.
"Demand for this process has increased among women attending
hospitals in the UK – but this has outstripped professional
awareness and guidance," said Aubrey Cunnington, an honorary
consultant in paediatric infectious diseases at Imperial College
London, who co-wrote the BMJ report.
"There is simply no evidence to suggest it has benefits - and it may
carry potential risks."
Some studies suggest that babies born by C-section have a different
microbiome - the collection of millions of bacteria living in the
gut - to those born vaginally.
Around one in four babies in Britain are born via caesarean section,
according to the BMJ report, co-written by Cunningham and five other
doctors.
Research also shows that C-section babies have slightly increased
risk of developing conditions such as obesity, allergies and
autoimmune diseases later in life.
Cunnington said a theory has developed that this may be because the
bacteria the baby is exposed to in the birth canal during a vaginal
birth colonise the baby's gut, so exposing those who miss out on it
might help protect them.
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"People have made a leap of logic that gut bacteria must be the link
between caesarean section and risk of these diseases," Cunningham
said. "But we just don't know this for sure - or whether we can even
influence this by transferring bacteria on a swab from mum to baby."
He added that while there is no evidence of benefits from "vaginal
seeding", the practice has potential risks such as transferring
harmful bacteria to the baby.
"Doctors, nurses, midwives and parents need to be aware they are
doing something with a potential risk that currently doesn’t have
any evidence of benefit," Cunnington said.
He added that evidence-based interventions, such as encouraging
breast feeding and avoiding unnecessary antibiotics, could be "more
important to a baby's gut bacteria than worrying about transferring
vaginal fluid on a swab".
(Editing by Dominic Evans)
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