Urut is often described in postpartum care as something almost magical. Some mothers say it helps them feel lighter and more relaxed. Others believe it can help “push out” or “clear” lochia more effectively after birth.
But here is the more careful question: does feeling better after massage automatically mean the massage is medically clearing lochia?
Many mothers hear the phrase “clear the lochia” and imagine it as something trapped that needs to be forced out. But lochia is a normal postpartum discharge that changes over time on its own, usually becoming lighter and less bloody over the weeks after birth.
That means the body already has a natural postpartum process. It is not as simple as saying “if you do not massage, it will stay stuck inside.”
| What Mothers May Experience | Why It Feels Convincing | What Needs Caution |
|---|---|---|
| Feeling more relaxed after massage | Comfort can make it feel like circulation or recovery improved | Feeling better does not automatically prove a change in lochia clearance |
| Some lochia comes out afterwards | The timing makes it easy to assume the massage caused it | Lochia can also naturally come out in phases |
| Many older relatives strongly believe in it | Repeated personal stories feel persuasive | Tradition and anecdote are not the same as medical evidence |
Many mothers attach all of Urut’s value to the idea of “removing lochia.” But a more realistic way to look at it may be this:
Those things may matter. But they are different from saying it is a medical method for clearing postpartum bleeding.
If your bleeding had been settling down and then becomes noticeably heavier again, that should not automatically be brushed off as a positive sign.
That raises more concern about infection or abnormal recovery than about “good clearing.”
These are the kinds of symptoms that deserve medical attention, not reassurance through massage alone.
The first few expectations may be more realistic. The last one deserves far more caution.
So, can Malay Urut massage really “flush out” lochia? The more responsible answer is that it may help some mothers feel physically or emotionally better, but that does not make the lochia-clearing claim medically proven.
If you treat Urut as comfort-focused postpartum care, that is one thing. If you use it to explain away warning signs like foul-smelling discharge, fever, heavy bleeding, or large clots, that is where the risk begins.
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