Maybe putting herbs in your vagina isn't the best idea
I’ve talked before about the perils of using douches—douching messes with your vagina’s natural flora and can upset its pH balance, leading to infections and worse. But what about organic herbal vaginal cleansers?
Recently, a company called Embrace Pangaea out of Tallahassee, Florida, began offering a product called Herbal Womb Detox Pearls. These small, round satchels are filled with herbs and meant to be inserted into the vagina for no more than 72 hours—which, objectively, seems like a long period of time to have anything up in your vagina. The satchels contain plants commonly used in natural health remedies around the world.
According to Embrace Pangaea’s website, their products will “cleanse the womb and return it to a balance state,” as well as treat vaginal health issues including bacterial vaginosis, “foul odor,” yeast infections, endometriosis, and fibroids—which seems ambitious, to say the least.
On the chance you’re reading this and thinking SIGN ME UP!!!, I’ve got some sobering news: Despite some lifestyle bloggers singing their praises, putting herbs in your vagina probably won’t help whatever you’re trying to fix—and may lead to serious health conditions, according to physicians. As part of my ongoing quest to get women to stop trying to “detox” their vaginas, allow me to walk you through the science.
I first learned about the pearls when Dr. Jennifer Gunter, a San Francisco Bay Area OBGYN, published an impassioned blog post against the products last week, insisting, “Your uterus isn’t tired or depressed or dirty and your vagina has not misplaced its chakra.” She went on to explain that none of our organs want help “unless there is something wrong and they will tell you there is something wrong by bleeding profusely or itching or cramping badly or producing an odor.”
(Gunter’s post spread like wildfire, with outlets from Yahoo! Health to New York Magazine echoing her plea not to stick herbs up in there—and detailing the risks, from infection to toxic shock syndrome.)
Curious where these products originated, I called up the founder and owner of Embrace Pangaea, Tamieka Atkinson, and asked her to elaborate on her website’s claims. “The herbs help to remove toxins, break down tissue cells, and also because the herbs are fragrant, like peppermint, when you insert them into your womb, it helps create a fresh smell,” the 24-year-old entrepreneur told me over the phone.
(I’ve said it once and I’ll say it again—whether you’re using a giant corporation’s douching product or natural herbs, your vagina does not need to smell like anything other than a vagina.)
Atkinson explained that a few years ago, she had developed bacterial vaginosis, a common condition that occurs when the vagina experiences an overgrowth of bacteria. She found that the medicine she was prescribed at a clinic did not help her condition, so she decided to take matters into her own hands and turned to Google to look for a holistic approach.