Despite a ban, fresh human placentas continue to be secretly sold in underground markets in China, citing insiders of this illegal industry, Chinese media reported on Monday.
The Standard, Hong Kong's English daily newspaper citing an investigative report published on thepaper.cn on Monday reported that underground dealers buy discarded placentas, with a strong smell of blood, from hospitals, funeral parlours and medical waste treatment plants for around 80 yuan (USD 12) each, and sell them to illegal shops or for several hundred yuan after being processed.
The Global Times found that human placentas were being sold on shopping websites including Xianyu, a second-hand item trading platform from Alibaba. Most sellers use vague names to describe their products, instead of directly advertising them as placentas.
One of the retailers sold placentas for 360 yuan each on Xianyu. "I could cut the price to 260 yuan if you buy more," he told the Global Times reporter. "We purchase the raw material at 2,000 yuan per kilogram."
Currently, hospitals in China either return the placentas to their owners or dispose of them as medical waste if new mothers don't want them, according to Huang Chengsheng, an obstetrician at the Shanghai Sixth People's Hospital with six years of experience.
Many new mothers choose to take their placentas home and eat them, Huang said.
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It is common that Chinese people, especially the elders, eat human placentas, which, they believe are rich in nutrients and are good for their health, several mothers told the Global Times.
Moreover, processing placenta into capsules has become a business in China, as some may feel uncomfortable eating it directly.
"In ancient Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), the human placenta was mainly used to enhance immunity, or to treat asthma and bronchitis," said a TCM pharmacist surnamed Yao, reported The Standard.
In China, illicit trading of the human placenta can be punished under the Regulations on the Administration of Medical Wastes, although there are no laws specifically targeting it, said legal expert, Zhang Bo. Violators of the regulation usually receive a fine that is not more than five times the amount of the illegal profits, he said.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)