STIGMA, DISCLOSURE, AND FAMILY FUNCTIONING AMONG PARENTS OF CHILDREN CONCEIVED THROUGH DONOR INSEMINATION

Citation
Rd. Nachtigall et al., STIGMA, DISCLOSURE, AND FAMILY FUNCTIONING AMONG PARENTS OF CHILDREN CONCEIVED THROUGH DONOR INSEMINATION, Fertility and sterility, 68(1), 1997, pp. 83-89
Citations number
22
Categorie Soggetti
Obsetric & Gynecology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00150282
Volume
68
Issue
1
Year of publication
1997
Pages
83 - 89
Database
ISI
SICI code
0015-0282(1997)68:1<83:SDAFFA>2.0.ZU;2-L
Abstract
Objective: To examine the influence of gender, male infertility factor , and other demographic variables on stigma and whether parents tell t heir children that they were conceived by donor insemination (DI) and to ascertain if stigma and the disclosure decision affect parental ban ding with the child or the quality of the interparental relationship. Design: One hundred eighty-four San Francisco Bay Area couples who had become parents by DI were asked to complete a self-administered quest ionnaire. Setting: A private infertility practice. Patient(s): Eighty- two men and 94 women who completed the questionnaire. Main Outcome Mea sure: A questionnaire assessing disclosure, stigma, parental bonding, and the quality of the interparental relationship. Result(s): Factors that increased the couple's likelihood of disclosure included younger age, azoospermia, lower stigma scores, and having more than one DI chi ld. Fathers who scored higher on stigma reported less parental warmth and parental fostering of independence. Conclusion(s): Because the dec ision regarding disclosure of DI treatment was not Linked to parental bonding with the child or to the quality of the interparental relation ship, we cannot conclude that nondisclosure is harmful to family relat ionships or is a symptom of family problems. The husband's perceptions of stigma however, may affect the father-child relationship adversely . (C) 1997 by American Society for Reproductive Medicine.