Delayed Cord Clamping and Cord Blood Banking
16/01/2024
When you’re pregnant, you may be considering what you can do with the placenta and umbilical cord of your baby after birth. You might have heard of delayed cord clamping or even optimal cord clamping as well as the possibility of keeping, donating and even storing your placenta. You may also be aware of the potential to store the leftover blood from your baby’s umbilical cord, rich in stem cells, which is known as cord blood banking.
Can these choices work together? Do you have to pick one or the other? Read on to learn more.
What is Umbilical Cord storage?
Delayed cord clamping (sometimes called deferred or optimal cord clamping) is when you leave the cord for a minute or more before cutting it. Once the umbilical cord is cut, the baby is then separated from its placenta.
It is normal to “wait for white” before cutting the cord, which is a sign that the blood in the umbilical cord has entered the baby and the transfer from their placenta has stopped. One benefit of this is that it allows more iron to enter the baby from the placenta, which is essential for their brain development.
There is no set length of time. We recommend talking to your doctor and midwife for some further information but the length of time you wait is 100% your choice.
The benefits of delayed cord clamping
For most babies, the World Health Organisation recommends delayed cord clamping. This is also the position of the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) in the UK, which aims to put “science and evidence at the health of health and care decision making”, for example, in the National Health Services (NHS).
The benefits of delayed cord clamping are:
- Higher haemoglobin concentration (more oxygen in the blood)
- More iron in the blood, essential for infant brain development
- Better blood pressure
- More stem cells, which support growth and a developing immune system