Expert Warns Against Vaginal Seeding Saying It Can Transmit Chlamydia To Babies

Newborn baby being examined by healthcare professional in hospital setting.

An expert has warned that mothers should not allow vaginal seeding on their babies born through caesarean section as it could give the babies the deadly chlamydia.

Some mothers believe that vaginal seeding, which involves transferring’vaginal fluid across the faces of babies born via C-section, – stimulates their babies’ immune systems and exposes them to important’micro-organisms they missed out on in the birth canal. However, Dr Christopher Zahn from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists warns that mothers who didn’t know they are carrying sexually transmitted infections that are commonly symptomless such as chlamydia could be transmitted to their newborns, which can cause fatal pneumonia. Expert Warns Against Vaginal Seeding Saying It Can Transmit Chlamydia To Babies | Stay at Home Mum

He said that there is insufficient evidence that suggests exposure to ‘good bacteria’ in the mother’s birth canal lowers a’baby’s risk of developing conditions such as asthma and allergies later on in the baby’s life.

“Understandably, patients who may need to undergo a c-section are increasingly seeking counsel from ob-gyns on whether vaginal seeding is appropriate. – However, due to the lack of sufficient data, the very real risks outweigh the potential benefits,” he added.

While’he also said that the bacteria responsible for chlamydia and gonorrhea or even the herpes virus, may’also be transmitted to children born vaginally, but the risk is more apparent when the infected fluid is directly applied to babies’ faces.

Dr’Zahn recommends that mothers with babies born via c-section can help overcome their lack of vaginal fluid exposure by exclusively breastfeeding them for the first six months.

“The bacteria present in breast milk and on the nipple is sufficient for natural colonization or seeding of the gut.

“There may be some initial difference in the gut microbiota of infants based on mode of delivery, but research has shown that difference disappears after about six months,” he said.

Source: – Dailymail.co.uk

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Clare Whitfield Chief Editor
Clare Whitfield is the Editor of Stay at Home Mum and a recognised voice in practical home management for Australian families. Based in the northern suburbs of Sydney, she balances editorial leadership with life as a stay at home mum to two school age children. Her background in home economics and more than a decade of experience in recipe development, family budgeting, and household systems inform her work.

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