| Literature DB >> 23226509 |
Yve Stoebel-Richter1, Kristina Geue, Ada Borkenhagen, Elmar Braehler, Kerstin Weidner.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The use of reproductive medical treatments has become increasingly routine in recent years. This paper reports on a study of how different aspects of modern reproductive medicine are perceived by the German population.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23226509 PMCID: PMC3513297 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0050113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Socio-demographic characteristics of the sample.
| Total (N = 2110) | Female (N = 1181) | Male (N = 929) | ||
|
| 18–25 years | 367 (17.4%) | 193 (16.3%) | 174 (18.7%) |
| 26–35 years | 609 (28.9%) | 343 (29.0%) | 266 (28.6%) | |
| 36–45 years | 754 (35.7%) | 433 (36.7%) | 321 (34.1%) | |
| >45 years | 380 (18.0%) | 212 (18.0%) | 168 (18.1%) | |
|
| Married, living together | 1138 (53.9%) | 680 (57.6%) | 458 (49.3%) |
| Married, separated | 29 (1.4%) | 16 (1.4%) | 13 (1.4%) | |
| Single | 712 (33.7%) | 328 (27.8%) | 384 (41.3%) | |
| Divorced | 194 (9.2%) | 127 (10.7%) | 67 (7.2%) | |
| Widowed | 37 (1.8%) | 30 (2.5%) | 7 (0.8%) | |
|
| yes | 1365 (64.7%) | 798 (67.6%) | 567 (61.0%) |
|
| ||||
|
| Less than 10th grade | 644 (30.5%) | 346 (29.3%) | 298 (32.0%) |
| 10th grade | 974 (46.2%) | 589 (49.9%) | 385 (41.5%) | |
|
| Student | 20 (0.9%) | 6 (0.5%) | 14 (1.5%) |
| High school | 321 (15.2%) | 186 (15.7%) | 135 (14.6%) | |
| College/university degree | 151 (7.2%) | 54 (4.6%) | 97 (10.4%) | |
|
| yes | 1576 (74.7%) | 908 (77.0%) | 668 (71.9%) |
|
| yes | 1275 (60.4%) | 803 (68.0%) | 472 (50.8%) |
|
| yes | 27 (1.3%) | 24 (2.0%) | 3 (0.3%) |
Figure 1Decision in favour for against having one (more) child.
Knowledge-based questions and results.
| Total N = 2110 | Female | Male | Gender | Education | Education | Education | ||
| N = 1181 | N = 929 | Difference | degree | degree | Difference | |||
| Kendall tau b | Low N = 1638 | High N = 472 | Kendall tau b | |||||
| At what age does female fertility start to gradually decline? | 25 years | 64 (3%) | 40 (3.4%) | 24 (2.6%) |
| 29 (1.8%) | 35 (7.4%) |
|
| 30 years | 238 (11.3%) | 128 (10.8%) | 110 (11.8%) | 177 (10.8%) | 61 (12.9%) | |||
| 35 years | 507 (24%) | 309 (26.2%) | 198 (21.3%) | 394 (24.1%) | 113 (23.9%) | |||
| 40 years | 602 (28.5%) | 333 (28.2%) | 269 (29%) | 470 (28.7%) | 132 (28.0%) | |||
| 45 years | 388 (18.4%) | 209 (17.7%) | 179 (19.3%) | 312 (19.0%) | 76 (16.1%) | |||
| after menopause | 305 (14.5%) | 157 (13.3%) | 148 (15.9%) | 252 (15.4%) | 53 (11.2%) | |||
| How many couples do you think remain involuntarily childless in Germany, today? | thru 10% | 715 (33.9%) | 375 (31.8%) | 340 (36.6%) | .111 | 545 (33.3%) | 170 (36.0%) |
|
| 11–20% | 664 (31.5%) | 396 (33.5%) | 268 (28.8%) | 507 (31.0%) | 157 (33.3%) | |||
| 21–30% | 418 (19.8%) | 225 (19.1%) | 193 (20.8%) | 326 (19.9%) | 92 (19.5%) | |||
| 31–50% | 227 (10.8%) | 132 (11.2%) | 95 (10.2%) | 193 (11.8%) | 34 (7.2%) | |||
| >50% | 45 (2.1%) | 29 (2.5%) | 16 (1.7%) | 39 (2.4%) | 6 (1.3%) | |||
| What is your estimate of the likelihood that a woman becomes pregnant following one artificial insemination treatment cycle? | <10% | 216 (10.2%) | 127 (10.8%) | 89 (9.6%) |
| 176 (10.7%) | 40 (8.5%) | .227 |
| 10–25% | 454 (21.5%) | 261 (22.1%) | 193 (20.8%) | 332 (20.3%) | 122 (25.8%) | |||
| 26–50% | 665 (31.5%) | 389 (32.9%) | 276 (29.7%) | 517 (31.6%) | 148 (31.4%) | |||
| 51–80% | 573 (27.2%) | 305 (25.8%) | 268 (28.8%) | 461 (28.1%) | 112 (23.7%) | |||
| >80% | 157 (7.4%) | 75 (6.4%) | 82 (8.8%) | 121 (7.4%) | 36 (7.6%) | |||
| Have you ever heard, seen or readanything about reproductive medicineprior to this study? | yes | 1496 (70.9%) | 903 (76.5%) | 593 (63.8%) |
| 1102 (67.3%) | 394 (83.5%) |
|
| no | 440 (20.9%) | 193 (16.3%) | 247 (26.6%) | 390 (23.8%) | 50 (10.6%) | |||
| don’t know | 173 (8.2%) | 84 (7.1%) | 89 (9.6%) | 146 (8.9%) | 27 (5.7%) | |||
| How would you describe your knowledge about reproductive medicine? −> only participants who answered “yes” to the previous question | N | 1496 | 903 | 593 |
| 1102 | 394 |
|
| excellent | 24 (1.6%) | 18 (2.0%) | 6 (1.0%) | 13 (1.2%) | 11 (2.8%) | |||
| good | 189 (12.6%) | 131 (14.5%) | 58 (9.8%) | 137 (12.4%) | 52 (13.2%) | |||
| moderate | 672 (44.9%) | 446 (49.4%) | 226 (38.1%) | 476 (43.2%) | 196 (49.7%) | |||
| poor | 515 (34.4%) | 268 (29.7%) | 247 (41.7%) | 398 (36.1%) | 117 (29.7%) | |||
| very low or none at all | 96 (6.4%) | 40 (4.4%) | 56 (9.4%) | 78 (7.1%) | 18 (4.6%) | |||
May not add up to 100% due to missing data.
Attitude-based questions and results.
| Total | Female | Male | Gender | Education | Education | Education | ||
| N = 2110 | N = 1181 | N = 929 | Difference | degree Low | degree High | Difference | ||
| Kendall tau b | N = 1638 | N = 472 | Kendall tau b | |||||
| How much are you interested inreproductive medicine? | extremely | 27 (1.3%) | 25 (2.1%) | 2 (0.2%) |
| 19 (1.2%) | 8 (1.7%) |
|
| very | 94 (4.5%) | 57 (4.8%) | 37 (4%) | 72 (4.4%) | 22 (4.7%) | |||
| moderate | 547 (25.9%) | 364 (30.8%) | 183 (19.7%) | 395 (24.1%) | 152 (32.2%) | |||
| little | 806 (38.2%) | 447 (37.8%) | 359 (38.6%) | 596 (36.4%) | 210 (44.5%) | |||
| none at all | 633 (30%) | 286 (24.2%) | 347 (37.4%) | 555 (33.9%) | 78 (16.5%) | |||
| Assuming that you and your partnerdesire children and were not able tohave children the natural way, whatwould you do? | use all poss. of ART | 666 (31.6%) | 424 (35.9%) | 242 (26%) |
| 520 (31.7%) | 146 (30.9%) | .509 |
| adopt a child | 459 (21.8%) | 259 (21.9%) | 200 (21.5%) | 328 (20.0%) | 131 (27.8%) | |||
| remain childless | 468 (22.2%) | 224 (19%) | 244 (26.3%) | 394 (24.1%) | 74 (15.7%) | |||
| don’t know | 517 (24.5%) | 274 (23.2%) | 243 (26.2%) | 396 (24.2%) | 121 (25.6%) | |||
| Involuntarily childless couplesshould use all possibilities ofreproductive medicine for havingbiological children. | strongly disagree | 151 (7.2%) | 87 (7.4%) | 64 (6.9%) | .565 | 114 (7.0%) | 37 (7.8%) | .414 |
| somewhat disagree | 220 (10.4%) | 122 (10.3%) | 98 (10.5%) | 156 (9.5%) | 64 (13.6%) | |||
| neither agree/disagree | 681 (32.3%) | 375 (31.8%) | 306 (32.9%) | 534 (32.6%) | 147 (31.1%) | |||
| somewhat agree | 598 (28.3%) | 330 (27.9%) | 268 (28.8%) | 486 (29.7%) | 112 (23.7%) | |||
| strongly agree | 454 (21.5%) | 264 (22.4%) | 190 (20.5%) | 342 (20.9%) | 112 (23.7%) | |||
| Infertile couples use techniques ofassisted medicine without havingcorrectly calculated treatment risks. | strongly disagree | 152 (7.2%) | 85 (7.2%) | 67 (7.2%) | .274 | 102 (6.2%) | 50 (10.6%) |
|
| somewhat disagree | 419 (19.9%) | 245 (20.7%) | 174 (18.7%) | 298 (18.2%) | 121 (25.6%) | |||
| neither agree/disagree | 870 (41.2%) | 487 (41.2%) | 383 (41.2%) | 692 (42.2%) | 178 (37.7%) | |||
| somewhat agree | 472 (22.4%) | 251 (21.3%) | 221 (23.8%) | 388 (23.7%) | 84 (17.8%) | |||
| strongly agree | 186 (8.8%) | 106 (9%) | 80 (8.6%) | 148 (9.0%) | 38 (8.1%) | |||
| Older women should be able torealize their desire for children byusing reproductive medicine,independent of their age-basedbiological age limitation. | strongly disagree | 714 (33.8%) | 431 (36.5%) | 283 (30.5%) |
| 559 (34.1%) | 155 (32.8%) | .695 |
| somewhat disagree | 648 (30.7%) | 357 (30.2%) | 291 (31.3%) | 493 (30.1%) | 155 (32.8%) | |||
| neither agree/disagree | 444 (21%) | 234 (19.8%) | 210 (22.6%) | 358 (21.9%) | 86 (18.2%) | |||
| somewhat agree | 226 (10.7%) | 120 (10.2%) | 106 (11.4%) | 169 (10.3%) | 57 (12.1%) | |||
| strongly agree | 71 (3.4%) | 35 (3%) | 36 (3.9%) | 53 (3.2%) | 18 (3.8%) | |||
| Application of new techniques of reproductive medicine presents grave ethical conflicts. | strongly disagree | 195 (9.2%) | 99 (8.4%) | 96 (10.3%) | .089 | 142 (8.7%) | 53 (11.2%) | .031 |
| somewhat disagree | 384 (18.2%) | 217 (18.4%) | 167 (18%) | 314 (19.2%) | 70 (14.8%) | |||
| neither agree/disagree | 877 (41.6%) | 484 (41%) | 393 (42.3%) | 705 (43.0%) | 172 (36.4%) | |||
| somewhat agree | 405 (19.2%) | 232 (19.6%) | 173 (18.6%) | 299 (18.3%) | 106 (22.5%) | |||
| strongly agree | 242 (11.5%) | 146 (12.4%) | 96 (10.3%) | 173 (10.6%) | 69 (14.6%) | |||
| How would you appraise the advantages and disadvantages of reproductive medicine as a whole? | clear advantages | 121 (5.7%) | 64 (5.4%) | 57 (6.1%) | .423 | 90 (5.5%) | 31 (6.6%) |
|
| rather advantages | 420 (19.9%) | 242 (20.5%) | 178 (19.2%) | 308 (18.8%) | 112 (23.7%) | |||
| both adv. and disadv. | 758 (35.9%) | 423 (35.8%) | 335 (36.1%) | 589 (36.0%) | 169 (35.8%) | |||
| rather disadvantages | 352 (16.7%) | 207 (17.5%) | 145 (15.6%) | 266 (16.2%) | 86 (18.2%) | |||
| clear disadvantages | 197 (9.3%) | 107 (9.1%) | 90 (9.7%) | 161 (9.8%) | 36 (7.6%) | |||
| undecided | 251 (11.9%) | 130 (11%) | 121 (13%) | 216 (13.2%) | 35 (7.4%) | |||
May not add up to 100% due to missing data.