| Literature DB >> 34934991 |
Patricia E Hershberger1,2, Agatha M Gallo3, Kirby Adlam3, Martha Driessnack4, Harold D Grotevant5, Susan C Klock6, Lauri Pasch7, Valerie Gruss8.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To gain an in-depth understanding of parents' experiences telling children conceived by gamete and embryo donation about their genetic origins.Entities:
Keywords: Disclosure; donor insemination; donor offspring; embryo donation; oocyte donation
Year: 2021 PMID: 34934991 PMCID: PMC8655422 DOI: 10.1016/j.xfre.2021.08.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: F S Rep ISSN: 2666-3341
Semistructured interview guide: sample questions.
| Question | Content |
|---|---|
| Broad introductory Question | Think aloud about your experience thus far with telling your child(ren) about their donor conception, and verbalize what you are thinking and experiencing. Be as detailed or take as much time as you need to express your thoughts and experiences. |
| Probes | Who did the actual “telling” to your child(ren)? For example [for two-parent families], were you both present when you first told the child(ren) or did one of you first tell the child(ren) and the other follow-up? Can you tell me how you actually told your child(ren) about their donor conception? What language did you use? What word(s) do you use for the donor? When you told your child(ren), did you use any books, the internet, or other helpful prompts to aid you in your telling your child(ren)? If so, what did you use and how was it helpful to you or your child(ren)? Did you select a specific time or place and if so, why? Did you pick out a specific location? Any regrets about telling? Things you might do differently? If so, please explain. |
Parent demographic characteristics (N = 16 parents).
| Demographic characteristic | Parents (percentage, mean, or range) |
|---|---|
| Mothers (range) | 36–61 years |
| Fathers (range) | 43–52 years |
| Female | 13 (81.25%) |
| Male | 3 (18.75%) |
| Heterosexual/straight | 12 (12.50%) |
| Queer/bisexual | 2 (12.50%) |
| Lesbian | 1 (6.25%) |
| Gay | 1 (6.25%) |
| White | 15 (93.75%) |
| Indian and Asian | 1 (6.25%) |
| Hispanic or Latino/a | 0 (00.0%) |
| Donated eggs | 8 (50.00%) |
| Donated sperm | 4 (25.00%) |
| Donated embryos | 2 (12.50%) |
| Double donation (egg and sperm) | 2 (12.50%) |
| Gestational | 3 (18.75%) |
| Anonymous | 8 (50.00%) |
| Known | 6 (37.50%) |
| Open-identity | 2 (12.50%) |
| Married | 12 (75.00%) |
| Single (never married) | 3 (18.75%) |
| Divorced | 1 (6.25%) |
| Christian | 7 (43.75%) |
| Jewish | 6 (37.50%) |
| Roman Catholic | 1 (6.25%) |
| Hindu and Jewish and Protestant | 1 (6.25%) |
| No religion or atheist | 1 (6.25%) |
Examples of parent’s words and language preferences for the donors.
| Parent and donation type | Donor type and age of children | Words and language preference for donors |
|---|---|---|
| Mother 1 | Known donor | “So that’s what my struggle was, was like, ‘What’s common vocabulary that I can feel comfortable explaining this?’ The idea of saying, ‘You were conceived from a donor embryo. Let me explain what an embryo is’ as opposed to ‘You have biological parents that are not me.’ It just felt like more loving language than the words donor sperm and donor egg, right? But I didn’t know—I still don’t know, to be honest. That is still a problem for me because I want to express the love that was given from these people who donated, who don’t know us, and yet, I don’t want to use the word parent.” |
| Mother 2 | Open-identity | “Do I specifically use the word donor? Yes. And again, I don’t emphasize dad. I feel a little touch of sadness when I say, ‘We don’t have a dad in this family.’ But that is the truth. We don’t have a dad in this family… We just say in our family we don’t have a dad because I don’t believe a donor is a dad… He’s really close with my dad, and he hears me call my dad, ‘Dad,’ so sometimes, he calls him ‘grandpa dad.’” |
| Mother 3 | Known donor | “I’m careful not to use like, ‘Donor mother.’ And I will, pardon my French, shoot that shit down and I have.” |
| Mother 4 | Known donor | “We weren’t going to define for our children how they saw these extended people in their lives… Are they going to look at Cousin Noah and consider him as a sibling? Or is he a cousin? Or is he somewhere in between? And we’re not making—we’re not defining that for them. We’ll say the word ‘gibling’ or we’ll say the word ‘cousin.’ But we don’t put any perimeters on that…. It’s really going to be up to our kids, the relationships they decide to have.” |
| Mother 5 | Anonymous donor | “We call her a very generous woman. He knows the word donor. We use the word donor, too, and he’ll ask me, ‘Mommy did [the donor] _______?’… But we also use ‘very generous woman.’” |
| Mother 6 | Anonymous donor | “I call her your egg donor.” |
| Mother 7 | Anonymous donor | “So how I usually refer to her is a ‘donor mom’ because some people don’t like the term mom or mother. But I don’t know. I think of it as she’s a type of mom, so I just specify which type. Oh, sorry. Let me back up. I actually also say ‘genetic mom’ when that’s relevant. I usually say that more to adults though, yeah, who don’t know the donor situation, and then I can explain that to them. |
| Mother 9 | Anonymous donors | [She said to her children] “I am your real mom. Your mom is what happens when you come home from the hospital, and all of the things that I’ve done and experiences we’ve shared.’ I call the donors biological contributors. I don’t call them mother or father or parent. It helps me and it probably helps them [children] also to use that term. I think words and terminology are very important in life. So, I do think other people might say, ‘Oh, the |
| Mother 10 | Open-identity | “Their bio father. So we said to them, ‘You do have a biological father.’” |
| Father 11 | Known | “We say [the donor’s first name] or egg donor. I intentionally say it as egg donor because she’s not mom.” |
| Mother 12 | Known | “I just say either the egg donor or the donor. I mean, I don’t introduce the word mom into it because I think that would be extremely confusing. But it comes naturally to me to say the egg donor or the donor.” |
Notes:aDenotes donor’s identity to be released to the child when the child reaches 18 years of age.
Examples of parents’ telling stories.
| Parent and donation type | Age of child(ren) | Telling story |
|---|---|---|
| Mother 2 | 3 years | “Well, this is our story. ‘I wanted you. I wanted to be a mom. I went to a doctor, and I got help from a sperm, and the doctor helped put the sperm in my body, and it became you. And we’re grateful to this person.’ It very, very quickly glosses over the word person, and that we don’t know this person. And then it’s like, ‘And then you and I became a family.’” |
| Mother 3 | 5 years | “And I said that, ‘Mommy gave the uterus. A donor gave the eggs. Daddy gave the sperm. And mommy and daddy wanted you very much. And that’s what makes me your mummy.’ And there’s a little bit of back and forth because she’s grabbing my hair … And then, when she was two, it sort of evolved into, ‘Mommy and daddy wanted you very much. So mommy and daddy tried for a baby. And we tried and we tried and we tried, and no baby came. [We] went to the doctor and the doctor said, ‘Oh, to make a baby you need three things.’ … And daddy has the sperm, mommy has the uterus but mommy doesn’t have the right kind of eggs.’” |
| Mother 5 | 8 years | “So I would just tell him, ‘I gave birth to you, but you need to know you were formed with daddy's sperm and a very generous woman’s eggs.” [And] “Sweetie, you remember the story of how you were born? Well, now let me tell you how you were conceived. Daddy and I loved you so much. We so much wanted to have a baby. We wanted you even before you were born. But I needed help or we needed help.” |
| Mother 6 | 10 years | “It's like, ‘A nice lady gave us a present.’ For kids that are too little to understand.” [And] “So recently, a few more questions and Timmy [child conceived by donor] in particular coming to this conclusion like, ‘Oh, so it took three people to make me?’ Right, the egg donor donated some of her eggs. And then it was daddy sperm. And then it was mommy’s uterus and my body that built you the rest of the way.” |
| Mother 8 | 3 years | “This is like an evolving thing. But she knows that people sometimes need help to have a baby and go to a doctor, and the doctor can help them. And sometimes, people help by giving a little piece that’s called an embryo because she understands some of these things.” |
| Mother 10 | 4 years | “We used the language that we came up with on our own which is you have two moms and a donor and then when I read the thing it was like that’s not—it’s not the kid’s donor, it’s our donor. It’s their biological parent. And so when it came up at some point it was important to me to start saying, ‘Well, you don’t have a daddy, but you do have a biological father.’” |
| Mother 13 | 10 years | “But we did say to him [when he was 3] that mommy had something in her that was broken and we asked a lady for a piece of her, if she would let us have what was working for her that she didn’t need and we said the same thing about daddy. Daddy was broken and so we had to borrow that from a boy and that we were going to fly on a plane and have a doctor put a baby in me, in three-year-old terms.” |
| Mother 14 | 12 years | “And we just went in her room and we were like, ‘Hey - this is really awkward. We just have to tell you something. And we just jumped right in. She had always known that she was conceived through IVF, but we just added in that extra layer of it.” |