Postpartum Hemorrhage
产后血崩 · chǎn hòu xuè bēng+9 other namesHide other names
Also known as: Bleeding After Childbirth, Excessive Bleeding After Childbirth, Excessive Postnatal Bleeding, Postnatal Bleeding, Postnatal Hemorrhage, Postpartum Bleeding, Postpartum Haemorrhage, Sudden Postpartum Uterus Bleeding, Postpartum Hemorrhage And Bleeding
The color of the blood and the presence or absence of clots tells the TCM practitioner everything - bright-red gushing blood points to Qi collapse, dark clotted blood with cramping pain points to stasis, and continuous bright bleeding after a difficult delivery points to traumatic deficiency. Each pattern responds to a completely different herbal strategy.
About this page · what it is and isn't
What this is. A plain-English synthesis of how classical TCM and modern clinical research describe postpartum hemorrhage. Patterns and herbs come from canonical TCM sources; clinical claims are cited in the Evidence section.
What it isn't. A diagnosis. Me&Qi is an editorial team, not a licensed clinic. The pattern quiz is a thinking tool — pulse and tongue still need a person in the room. Anything in the Safety section should send you to a doctor, not a herb.
Last reviewed Jun 2026.
Educational content about Traditional Chinese Medicine — not medical advice. See a qualified practitioner for diagnosis and treatment.
Postpartum hemorrhage isn't a single event in TCM - it's a family of three distinct patterns, each with its own cause, its own characteristic bleeding, and its own treatment. One is a Qi collapse pattern where the body is simply too exhausted to hold blood in the vessels. One is a blood stasis pattern where clots block the normal channels and force bleeding to continue. One is a deficiency pattern from birth trauma where direct injury depletes both Qi and Blood simultaneously. Each requires a fundamentally different approach.
Conventional treatments
Where conventional treatment falls short
How TCM understands postpartum hemorrhage
TCM understands postpartum hemorrhage primarily through the lens of Qi and its relationship with Blood. Qi has a critical function called 'governing Blood' (统血, tǒng xuè) - it is the force that holds blood inside the vessels. Childbirth places an enormous demand on Qi. When the Spleen and Stomach Qi are already weak, they can become so exhausted that they can no longer perform this holding function. The result is a sudden, profuse gush of bright-red bleeding, often accompanied by extreme fatigue, pallor, and cold limbs.
But Qi collapse is only one part of the story. Sometimes the uterus does not contract well after delivery, or residual tissue remains. In TCM terms, this causes blood to pool and congeal into clots. These clots block the vessels, preventing blood from returning to its proper channels. The bleeding continues, but now the blood is dark and clotted, and it is accompanied by a stabbing lower belly pain that eases once the clots pass. This is a Blood Stagnation pattern, and it requires moving the stasis, not just stopping the bleeding.
A third pattern arises from direct birth trauma - lacerations or uterine injury that damage blood vessels. This causes acute and continuous blood loss that depletes both Qi and Blood simultaneously. With Qi too weak to hold blood in the vessels, the bleeding persists, leaving the body in a state of severe Qi and Blood Deficiency. This is why one Western diagnosis of postpartum hemorrhage can have three completely different TCM causes - and why the treatment must match the underlying pattern, not just the symptom of bleeding.
「生化汤为产后第一方。」
"Sheng Hua Tang is the foremost formula for the postpartum period."
How a TCM practitioner diagnoses postpartum hemorrhage
Inside the consultation
A TCM practitioner begins by asking about the timing, color, and volume of the bleeding, and whether there is any abdominal pain. The answers immediately point toward one pattern or another, because each underlying imbalance creates a distinct picture.
If the bleeding is sudden, profuse, and bright red, accompanied by extreme exhaustion, a pale face, dizziness, and cold limbs, the pattern is likely Qi Collapsing or Qi Sinking. Here the body’s Qi is so depleted that it can no longer hold the Blood inside the vessels. The tongue is pale, and the pulse feels weak and rapid.
When the bleeding is dark or contains large clots, and there is lower abdominal pain that eases noticeably after a clot passes, the pattern is Blood Stagnation in the Directing and Penetrating Vessels. The pain and the clotty quality are the key clues. The tongue may be dark with stasis spots, and the pulse feels deep and rough.
If there is a known birth injury, such as a tear, and the bleeding is continuous and bright red with a pale face and a thready, rapid pulse, the pattern is Qi and Blood Deficiency from direct trauma. The history of a difficult delivery and the unremitting nature of the loss point to this less common but serious picture.
TCM Patterns for Postpartum Hemorrhage
In TCM, the aim is to address the root cause, not just the symptom — it calls that root cause a “pattern.” The same postpartum hemorrhage can come from several different patterns, each treated differently. The quickest way to find yours is the quiz below.
Find your pattern
Tap any sign that fits how yours feels.
- 1Your signs
- 2What makes it worse
- 3What helps
Which signs match your experience?
It is very common to recognise elements of more than one pattern, because all postpartum hemorrhage involves a profound loss of Qi and Blood. The question is which feature is dominant - the sudden collapse, the stabbing pain with clots, or the unbroken flow after an injury.
To narrow it down, observe what makes the bleeding better or worse. Rest may slightly ease a Qi collapse, while stasis pain typically improves only after a clot is passed. A history of a tear or surgical delivery that leads to continuous bright bleeding strongly suggests the traumatic deficiency pattern.
Because heavy bleeding after childbirth is a medical emergency, any self-assessment must be followed by immediate professional help. Overlapping signs can be confusing, and only a practitioner’s evaluation of the tongue, pulse, and overall picture can safely guide herbal or acupuncture treatment.
If bleeding is sudden, severe, or you feel faint, seek emergency care without delay. The patterns described here are not a substitute for a full diagnosis; they are a map to help you communicate clearly with your healthcare provider.
Qi Collapsing or Qi Sinking
Qi and Blood Deficiency
Treatment
Four ways to address postpartum hemorrhage in TCM — explore each, or take the quiz to see what fits you first.
Formulas traditionally used for postpartum hemorrhage
3 formulas across the patterns above. The right one depends on your pattern — start with the quiz if you're unsure which fits.
An emergency rescue formula consisting of a single herb, Ginseng (Ren Shen), used at high dosage to powerfully restore the body's vital Qi when it is on the verge of collapse. It is traditionally used in critical, life-threatening situations involving severe blood loss, shock, or extreme exhaustion where the pulse is barely detectable and consciousness is fading.
A classical formula designed to warm the lower abdomen, improve Blood circulation, and relieve pain. It is particularly well suited for women experiencing menstrual cramps, irregular periods, or fertility difficulties linked to Cold and Blood stasis in the pelvic area. The formula combines warming herbs with Blood-moving herbs to address both the underlying Cold and the resulting stagnation.
A classical formula for excessive sweating caused by body weakness, whether it occurs during the day (spontaneous sweating) or at night (night sweats). It works by strengthening the body's surface defense while directly closing the pores and anchoring the body's fluids. Commonly used after illness, surgery, or childbirth, or for chronic sweating from general debility.
For Qi collapse patterns, improvement in bleeding and energy is often noticeable within the first week of herbal treatment, with continued recovery over 4-6 weeks. Blood stasis patterns typically respond quickly - often within a few days - as clots are passed and pain resolves. Traumatic deficiency patterns from birth injury require the longest recovery, often 2-3 months, as the body rebuilds both Qi and Blood from a deeply depleted state. Acupuncture is typically given 1-2 times per week initially, tapering as recovery progresses.
Treatment principles
What to expect from treatment
General dietary guidance
Combining TCM with conventional treatment
*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
Safety & special considerations
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Soaking through a pad in less than an hour — This indicates severe hemorrhage and requires immediate emergency care.
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Feeling faint, dizzy, or losing consciousness — These are signs of significant blood loss and impending shock.
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Passing clots larger than a golf ball — Large clots may indicate retained placental tissue or severe uterine atony.
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Severe or worsening abdominal pain — This could signal infection, uterine rupture, or other serious complications.
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Fever over 100.4°F (38°C) with foul-smelling discharge — These are signs of postpartum infection and require urgent antibiotic treatment.
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Chest pain or difficulty breathing — These could indicate a blood clot in the lungs or other life-threatening conditions.
Audience-specific guidance — open what applies to you
During the immediate postpartum period, the priority is to stop the hemorrhage, and many of the herbs used are safe for breastfeeding. Tonics like Ren Shen, Huang Qi, and Dang Gui not only help restore Qi and Blood but also support milk production. However, strong blood-moving herbs such as Pu Huang and Yi Mu Cao should be used cautiously and only under professional guidance, as they could theoretically affect the baby through breast milk.
In practice, the acute nature of postpartum hemorrhage means that herbal formulas are given for a short period, and the benefits of saving the mother’s life far outweigh any minor risks to breastfeeding. Once the bleeding is controlled, the focus shifts to nourishing Qi and Blood, which naturally promotes a healthy milk supply.
Evidence & references
Clinical research on TCM for postpartum hemorrhage is limited but growing. A 2024 observational study published in Medicine found that Shenghua decoction, when added to standard care, significantly reduced blood loss and improved uterine involution in women with uterine atony. This aligns with centuries of traditional use, though the study design lacked a placebo control.
Most other evidence comes from Chinese-language case series and small trials, which consistently report positive outcomes but often suffer from methodological weaknesses. High-quality randomized controlled trials are still needed to confirm these findings. Nevertheless, the historical track record and the biological plausibility of the herbs’ actions - such as promoting uterine contraction and improving coagulation - provide a reasonable basis for cautious clinical use.
Key clinical studies
This observational study evaluated Shenghua decoction as an adjunct to standard oxytocin for postpartum hemorrhage due to uterine atony. The herbal group had significantly lower blood loss and faster uterine involution compared to controls. The study suggests Shenghua decoction may enhance uterine contraction and reduce bleeding, though randomized trials are needed.
Shenghua decoction for postpartum hemorrhage attributed to uterine atony: An observational study
Wang Y, et al. Shenghua decoction for postpartum hemorrhage attributed to uterine atony: An observational study. Medicine (Baltimore). 2024;103(32):e39234.
https://doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000039234Classical text references
One quote is featured above in the Understanding section — the rest are listed here for the classically inclined.
「产后血崩,因气虚不能摄血,或瘀血内阻,新血不得归经。」
"Postpartum hemorrhage is due to Qi deficiency failing to contain blood, or blood stasis blocking the channels so that new blood cannot return to its pathways."
Yi Zong Jin Jian (Golden Mirror of Medicine)
Chapter on Postpartum Hemorrhage
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about using Traditional Chinese Medicine for postpartum hemorrhage.
Yes, certain Chinese herbal formulas are specifically designed to stop postpartum bleeding - but only when matched to the correct pattern. Qi collapse patterns respond to strong tonifying formulas with Ren Shen and Huang Qi that restore the body's ability to hold blood. Blood stasis patterns need formulas that gently move clots and allow blood to return to the channels. However, postpartum hemorrhage is a medical emergency. Herbs should only be used under professional supervision and after the acute situation has been assessed by a doctor.
TCM treatment can begin very soon after delivery, often within the first few days, once any acute emergency has been stabilized. In fact, many TCM practitioners recommend starting herbal soups or teas within the first week to support uterine contraction, promote healthy lochia flow, and begin rebuilding Qi and Blood. Acupuncture can also be started early, though points are chosen carefully to avoid overstimulation during this delicate recovery period.
Yes - rebuilding Qi and Blood is one of the greatest strengths of TCM postpartum care. Heavy blood loss depletes both Qi and Blood, leaving new mothers exhausted, pale, dizzy, and slow to recover. Herbal formulas that combine Qi tonics like Huang Qi with Blood nourishers like Dang Gui and Shu Di Huang are specifically designed to address this. Most women notice a gradual improvement in energy within 2-4 weeks of consistent herbal treatment, though full recovery from severe hemorrhage may take several months.
Warm, nourishing, easily digestible foods are the foundation of postpartum recovery. Bone broths, congees, slow-cooked stews, and soups help rebuild Qi and Blood without taxing the digestive system. Foods like eggs, liver, dark leafy greens, black sesame, and goji berries are particularly beneficial. Avoid cold, raw foods and icy drinks, which can shock the digestive system and slow recovery. Also avoid spicy, greasy, or overly processed foods that create dampness and burden the Spleen.
Yes, acupuncture can be very helpful for promoting uterine contraction and reducing postpartum bleeding. Points like Sanyinjiao (SP-6), Guanyuan (REN-4), and Zusanli (ST-36) are commonly used to support uterine involution and stop bleeding. Moxibustion - the warming of acupuncture points with a dried herb - is particularly effective for Qi collapse patterns where warmth and tonification are needed. Treatment is gentle and tailored to the new mother's condition.
Most Chinese herbs used for postpartum recovery are considered safe during breastfeeding, and many - like Dang Gui and Huang Qi - are traditionally used to support milk production as well as recovery. However, not all herbs are safe. Blood-moving herbs used for stasis patterns must be used carefully and only under professional guidance. Always inform your TCM practitioner that you are breastfeeding, and let your doctor know about any herbs you are taking.
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