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Preimplantation sex selection demand and preferences in an infertility population.

Jain T, Missmer SA, Gupta RS, Hornstein MD

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. tjain@uic.edu

OBJECTIVE: To determine the demand and preferences of infertility patients for sex selection and the method and sex they would choose, and to investigate the relationship between these choices and their demographic and socioeconomic characteristics. DESIGN: Cross-sectional survey. SETTING: University hospital-based fertility center. PATIENT(S): One thousand five hundred consecutive women who presented for infertility care. INTERVENTION(S): None. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Self-report questionnaire assessing the demand and preferences for sex selection. RESULT(S): Of respondents, 40.8% wanted to select the sex of their next child for no added cost. Of these patients, 45.9% had no living children and 48.4% had children all of one sex. After adjustment for observed predictors of gender preference, we found a significant preference for a female child among women who were older, not religious, willing to pay for sex selection, had more living children, had only sons, or had a diagnosis of male infertility. Nulliparous women did not significantly prefer one sex over the other. Among parous women, those with only daughters significantly desired to select a male child, whereas those with sons significantly desired to select a female child. In terms of the method of sex selection, 55.0%, 41.0%, and 4.0% of the patients would use sperm separation, preimplantation genetic diagnosis, or neither method, respectively. CONCLUSION(S): There is significant demand among infertility patients for preimplantation sex selection, with a significant portion of this demand coming from patients who do not have any children or have children all of one sex.

Published 7 March 2005 in Fertil Steril, 83(3): 649-58.
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IVF Books

The Boston IVF Handbook of Infertility: A Practical Guide for Practitioners Who Care for Infertile Couples, Second Edition

The Boston IVF Handbook of Infertility: A Practical Guide for Practitioners Who Care for Infertile Couples, Second Edition