Title of article :
Attitude of Medical Students toward Third-party Reproductive Techniques
Author/Authors :
Talebi, Ali School of Medicine - Shahroud University of Medical Sciences, Shahroud, Iran , Khodamoradi, Kajal Department of Anatomy - School of Medicine - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Rashidi, Zahra Fertility and Infertility Research Center - Health Technology Institute - Kermanshah University of Medical Sciences, Kermanshah, Iran , Khosravizadeh, Zahra Department of Infertility - Amiralmomenin Hospital - Arak University of Medical Sciences, Arak, Iran , Bayat, Nazanin Department of Nursing - Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery - Islamic Azad University Tehran Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Safarzadeh Kozani, Pooria Department of Medical Biotechnology - Faculty of Medical Sciences - Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran , Amidi, Fardin Department of Anatomy - School of Medicine - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
Abstract :
Background: Pregnancy with the help of a third party, including the
use of sperm, oocyte, embryo, and uterus, can be considered as an
option for some infertile couples. Due to the important role of health
professionals in infertility treatments, their attitudes are of particular
importance in the acceptance or rejection of fertility suggestions
involving the help of a third party. This study aimed to determine the
attitudes of medical students at medical universities in Tehran toward
third-party reproduction.
Methods: This descriptive cross-sectional study was carried out at the
medical university of Tehran in 2018. Medical students (n=187) filled
out the questionnaire, which consisted of two parts: the demographic
characteristics of the research subjects and the questionnaire consisted
of 76 questions about attitudes toward third-party reproduction. The
content and face validity of the questionnaire were determined, and
test-retest reliability of the questionnaire was established (0.89).
Results: According to gender, participants’ attitudes toward
childbearing, the importance of genetic dependency between parents
and children, law issues, anonymity in donation programs, parental
affection, the importance of the recipient's and donor's characteristics,
surrogacy, gamete, and embryo donation were all statistically nonsignificant
(Pvalue>0.05). According to age and also to year of
entering the university, participants’ attitude only toward childbearing
was statistically significant (Pvalue=0.018 and 0.01, respectively).
Conclusions: Since medical school students may set on the road to a
specialty associated with infertility and its ramifications, it’s better to
educate our soon-to-be health system professionals on all necessary
aspects of infertility and third-party reproduction.
Keywords :
Attitude , Donor conception , Infertility , Medical students , Assisted reproductive technique
Journal title :
International Journal of Health Studies