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Children & Families · Article + Reference Guide

Herbs in Pregnancy & Nursing

What the label doesn't tell you — herbs that are safe, herbs that are contraindicated, and how to navigate herbal medicine during pregnancy and breastfeeding.

Rev. Allie Johnson

Sanctified Healer · Monastic Medicine Practitioner

The question people are asking is "is this safe during pregnancy?" The question they should be asking is "what does this actually do, and is that appropriate for what my body is doing right now?" Those are not the same question — and the herbal supplement industry has made its business on that gap.

Pregnancy Is the Most Hormonally Active State the Body Enters

Estrogen, progesterone, hCG, prolactin, relaxin, cortisol, thyroid hormones — all elevated, all precisely orchestrated, all shifting in relationship to each other across 40 weeks. Any substance with receptor activity enters a system already operating at a hormonal maximum. The margin for interference is narrow. The stakes are not abstract: the fetus's developing endocrine system takes its hormonal cues from the maternal environment. What the mother's receptors experience, the developing baby's developing receptor architecture experiences too.

This is not a reason to be afraid of food or herbs wholesale. It is a reason to know what an herb actually does before taking it — which is information that is almost never on the label, and almost never part of the recommendation.

The Postpartum Crash

Within hours of delivery, estrogen and progesterone fall more sharply than at any other point in adult life. This drop is physiologically necessary — it is the trigger for milk production. Prolactin rises as estrogen falls. The body is designed for this transition.

What it is not designed for is having that already-depleted estrogen signal further blocked by the herbs in the postpartum tea the midwife recommended.

Red Raspberry Leaf — the backbone of most postpartum and pregnancy teas — blocks estrogen receptors. In an estrogen-depleted postpartum body, blocking the ER signal means estrogen that is already low cannot complete its signaling. The downstream effects — worsened postpartum mood, delayed tissue recovery, postpartum joint pain, brain fog, suppressed libido — are routinely attributed to "just being a new mom." The herb is rarely considered. It is not disclosed on the packaging. The midwife who recommended it does not know either.

The postpartum window is one of the worst times to use ER-blocking herbs.

Estrogen drops to near-menopausal levels after delivery and remains suppressed throughout breastfeeding. ER-blocking herbs compound an already-significant deficit. Symptoms that result — mood, joint pain, cognitive fog, libido — are normalized as "postpartum" when the herb is contributing.

The Galactagogue Trap

Low milk supply is one of the most common reasons new mothers stop breastfeeding. The standard recommendation — from lactation consultants, postpartum doulas, and natural health practitioners alike — is Fenugreek and Blessed Thistle, usually in a tea blend or capsule combination.

Neither herb has strong evidence for actually increasing milk production. The mechanism by which they might work is theoretical — mild prolactin stimulation in some studies, inconsistent results in others. What is not theoretical is their receptor activity.

Fenugreek is phytoestrogenic. Blessed Thistle is estrogenic. Both pass through breast milk. The infant consuming that milk is receiving estrogenic compounds through the primary food source — at a developmental stage when the endocrine system is still being calibrated. This has not been studied. It is recommended anyway.

Low milk supply has real causes: tongue tie, latch mechanics, feeding frequency and timing, hydration, mineral status, thyroid function, sleep deprivation, stress. Herbs do not address any of these. They are a management layer over an unaddressed root cause.

What Passes Through Breast Milk

Fat-soluble compounds cross into breast milk more readily than water-soluble ones. Volatile oils — the active constituents in peppermint, fennel, spearmint, chamomile — transfer directly. The safety databases that practitioners reference (LactMed, Drugs and Lactation Database) often assign a rating of "no known adverse effects in nursing infants" to herbs. This is frequently interpreted as "safe." What it actually means is "no studies have been done in nursing infants."

Peppermint and spearmint in quantity can reduce milk supply — spearmint is anti-androgenic and peppermint is documented to decrease prolactin activity. Both appear in nursing tea blends. Concentrated fennel oil is toxic to infants; culinary amounts in food are lower concern, but fennel supplements and nursing teas are not culinary amounts.

The "Traditional Use" Argument

The most common defense of herbs in pregnancy is that "women have used these for thousands of years." This is partly true and largely misapplied.

Traditional systems of medicine — Ayurveda, Traditional Chinese Medicine, Western herbalism — all had extensive restrictions on herb use in pregnancy. Ayurveda classifies herbs into heating and cooling categories with specific prohibitions on stimulating herbs in the first trimester. TCM has a formal list of contraindicated herbs in pregnancy. Traditional European herbalism similarly restricted uterine-stimulating herbs. The wisdom was not "use herbs freely" — it was precisely the opposite.

What grandmother used was an occasional mild cup of tea brewed from fresh or dried plant material, consumed in culinary quantities, not daily. Modern herbal supplements are concentrated extracts in capsule form, standardized to active constituent percentages, taken daily. This is not the same dose, in the same form, in the same context. The "traditional use" argument is being used to validate a modern practice that traditional herbalism would not have endorsed.

The question is not whether an herb is "natural" or has been used historically. The question is: what does this herb do to estrogen, progesterone, cortisol, and thyroid receptors — and is that the right direction for what this body is doing right now?

What Actually Supports These Transitions

Pregnancy, birth, and the postpartum period are not deficiency states to be supplemented. They are profound biological processes that the body is equipped to navigate when the foundational inputs are in place.

Food

Real whole food — adequate fat, adequate protein, mineral-dense. The specific macro ratio is individual. What is universal: industrial food (seed oils, refined sugars, packaged carbohydrates) does not support these transitions. Organ meats, eggs, butter, bone broth, and mineral-rich foods have supported pregnancy and postpartum recovery across cultures for the entirety of human history.

Minerals

Pregnancy and nursing are mineral-intensive. Spring water and Quinton seawater (marine plasma) provide the full spectrum of bioavailable trace minerals in proportions the body recognizes. This is not the same as isolated mineral supplements.

Rest and sleep

The single most undervalued postpartum intervention. Sleep deprivation is a significant driver of postpartum mood disorders, delayed physical recovery, and suppressed milk supply — and it is almost never addressed before recommending herbs or supplements.

Sunlight

Melatonin and prolactin are both regulated by light. Morning sunlight — not supplements, not light therapy panels — sets the hormonal rhythm that governs milk production timing, sleep cycles, and mood regulation in the postpartum period.

Skin-to-skin contact

Oxytocin and prolactin respond to physical contact, warmth, and the infant's presence. This is the primary biological driver of milk production — more than any herb.

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