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Completed H2020 European Commission

Fertility and Mental health: the impact of Assisted Reproductive Technology and fertility intentions on adults’ mental health.

€162.8K EUR

Funder European Commission
Recipient Organization Max-Planck-Gesellschaft Zur Forderung Der Wissenschaften Ev
Country Germany
Start Date Apr 21, 2022
End Date Apr 20, 2024
Duration 730 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Coordinator
Data Source European Commission
Grant ID 101023075
Grant Description

In In the last decades, low fertility rates have increasingly been a policy and societal concern.

Fertility rates have been coupled to the development of contraceptive and reproductive technologies, which dramatically affect the transition to parenthood.

In Western societies, where contraceptive use is widespread, unintended births are now uncommon events associated with early motherhood, family instability and low socioeconomic status.

Concomitantly, the utilization of Medically Assisted Reproduction (MAR), which often coincides with delays in childbearing and high socioeconomic resources, has rapidly increased and has revolutionized the way we think about parenthood.

Despite growing interest from scholars and policymakers in fertility and MAR, there remains a lack of research on how fertility intentions and the mode of conception affect couples’ mental health longitudinally.

By exploiting longitudinal survey data, I will be able, for the first time, to analyse how adults’ mental health changes before, during and after unintended, intended/natural and natural/medically assisted conceptions.

Advanced statistical techniques (e.g. ‘distributed’ fixed effects models) will be used to remove the bias introduced by unobserved confounding factors.

By examining Swedish Population register data, I will investigate how mental health changes before and after treatment among single women and (both heterosexual and lesbian) couples.

The project, which will be hosted at the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research (Germany), integrates four research areas (sociology, demography, epidemiology and psychology) to produce novel and cutting-edge research on fertility.

The aim is to shed light on the effects of fertility intentions and the mode of conception in countries where unplanned births are less common (Germany and Switzerland) and more common (the UK and the US), and where the majority of MAR treatments are funded publicly (the Sweden and Germany) and and privately (U.K.).

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Max-Planck-Gesellschaft Zur Forderung Der Wissenschaften Ev

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