Emmalee A Ford, Ava Medley, Catherine Chojenta, Tanmay Bagade, Sally Sweeney, Jessie M Sutherland
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A qualitative study of Australian adolescent perceptions of fertility and infertility.
Adolescents require a specific set of fertility information and services to promote reproductive health and wellbeing extending into adulthood. Due to a common focus on preventing unplanned pregnancy in adolescents, fertility education can be perceived as antithetical. This study explores awareness and attitudes about fertility in adolescents to guide relevant inclusion of fertility in future information and service delivery. Twenty-five adolescents aged 15 to 18 years who had attended secondary schooling in Australia were recruited to participate in nine focus groups. Reflexive thematic analysis revealed three themes (with seven sub-themes) in the transcripts. The importance of fertility education, stigma associated with infertility, and gender roles in the context of reproductive health were identified as being key themes. Broadly, awareness of infertility was seen as important, to navigate potential health consequences and to emotionally support stigmatised people experiencing infertility. This is the first qualitative study about perspectives of fertility and infertility in adolescents aged 18 and under in an Australian context. We make recommendations for developing age-appropriate fertility education, regarding the incorporation of appropriate frameworks in adolescent education to enhance discussions around sex and gender in fertility to align with contemporary preferences.
期刊介绍:
Human Fertility is a leading international, multidisciplinary journal dedicated to furthering research and promoting good practice in the areas of human fertility and infertility. Topics included span the range from molecular medicine to healthcare delivery, and contributions are welcomed from professionals and academics from the spectrum of disciplines concerned with human fertility. It is published on behalf of the British Fertility Society.
The journal also provides a forum for the publication of peer-reviewed articles arising out of the activities of the Association of Biomedical Andrologists, the Association of Clinical Embryologists, the Association of Irish Clinical Embryologists, the British Andrology Society, the British Infertility Counselling Association, the Irish Fertility Society and the Royal College of Nursing Fertility Nurses Group.
All submissions are welcome. Articles considered include original papers, reviews, policy statements, commentaries, debates, correspondence, and reports of sessions at meetings. The journal also publishes refereed abstracts from the meetings of the constituent organizations.