Placenta donation program a win-win-win situation

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Tuesday, January 19, 2021

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Placenta donation program a win-win-win situation

Mike Scott, mscott@stph.org

A new placenta donation program at St. Tammany Health System's New Family Center  is purely optional and doesn’t affect the delivery of the baby in any way. The placenta is simply collected and preserved afterward instead of being discarded.. (Photo by Tim San Fillippo / STHS)

The happiest place at St. Tammany Health System’s Covington hospital just got a little happier.

The STHS New Family Center – where babies are born, families are forged and smiles are plentiful – has launched a placenta donation program in which new mothers, in addition to welcoming their new bundles of joy, can both change the lives of others for the better and raise money for charity all at once.

“It’s really amazing,” said New Family Center Director Jamie Orr Romage MSN RN. “I just love the thought that something that is ordinarily discarded after birth, that is considered medical waste – but which is a part of bringing a life into this world – can provide healing benefits which may give someone a better quality of life.”

Operated in cooperation with the Florida-based firm TelaGen, the program gives expectant mothers who are scheduled to deliver their baby via Caesarean section the option of donating their placenta and the attached amniotic membrane (or water bag).

The tissue from the donation is then processed and used to stimulate cell growth in a variety of reconstructive procedures, including the healing of wounds and burns, spinal procedures and eye procedures, according to TelaGen.

I just love the thought that something that is ordinarily discarded after birth, that is considered medical waste – but which is a part of bringing a life into this world – can provide healing benefits which may give someone a better quality of life."

- Jamie Orr Romage MSN RN, director of the STHS New Family Center

The donation process is purely optional and doesn’t affect the delivery of the baby in any way, Romage said. The placenta is simply collected and preserved afterward instead of being discarded.

Additionally, it doesn’t cost the new mother anything. In fact, as part of St. Tammany Health System’s agreement with TelaGen, for each placenta donated at the hospital, the company will make a $25 donation to a charity chosen by the delivering doctor and another $25 donation to a charity chosen by the New Family Center.

That might not sound like a lot, but with somewhere in the neighborhood of 700 babies delivered via C-section at the Covington hospital in the past year, it can add up quickly.

“We’ve chosen the St. Tammany Hospital Foundation as our charity of choice,” Romage said. “That way, we know the donation isn’t just staying here in our community but it also will help to continue the healing work we perform at the hospital.”

According to foundation Executive Director Nicole Suhre, that donated money will be earmarked for needs identified by the New Family Center team.

That makes it a win-win-win situation, with the new mom, the recipient of the donated placenta and the community all benefitting.

“What a beautiful complement to ushering in new life – by improving the life of others,” Suhre said.

Learn more about the work of St. Tammany Hospital Foundation at STHfoundation.org.

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