探讨加拿大安大略省2SLGBTQIA +年轻人的父母意向和对不孕症和辅助生殖技术的看法:一项混合方法研究

IF 2.4 3区 医学 Q3 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Journal of Health, Population, and Nutrition Pub Date : 2025-01-18 DOI:10.1186/s41043-024-00729-7
Caitlin I T Ennis, Nurasha G Fernando, Karen P Phillips
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:随着Z世代双性人、女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别/跨性别、酷儿、双性人、无性恋以及其他认同为性和性别多元化群体(2SLGBTQIA +)的人步入成年,对家庭创造的思考可能会受到生物学和/或社会不育的挑战。尽管社会对性别和性少数群体的接受取得了一些进展,但计划生育和生殖保健仍然是异性恋规范。为了探讨生殖决策以及未来家庭是如何跨性别概念化的,我们评估了加拿大安大略省无父母,2SLGBTQIA +新兴成年人的看法。方法:采用基于性别和性别分析(SGBA +)的混合方法设计的在线调查,于2022年5月至10月招募年龄在18-30岁的无子女大专以上学生。通过不同性别群体的描述性统计分析调查问题。通过主题分析和内容分析对开放文本回复进行分析。结果:286例2SLGBTQIA +个体描述了生育意向、对未来家庭的概念和对ART的看法,这些个体主要是高加索人,顺性女性(69.2%),双性恋-泛性恋(66.4%),属于Z世代(85%)。只有33.9%的人明确想要孩子,33.6%的人不确定,32.5%的人宁愿不要孩子。描述参与者未来家庭愿景的主题包括:(i)承诺的伴侣是家庭,(ii)家庭包括儿童(副主题:收养/抚养作为家庭创建的选择),(iii)家庭价值观包括爱和接受,(iv)选择家庭,(v)家庭可以没有孩子。在未来不孕的情况下,抗逆转录病毒治疗是可以接受的,有两个主要主题用于描述抗逆转录病毒治疗的障碍:(i)治疗费用昂贵;(ii)我可能因性别认同/性取向而受到歧视。跨性别男性更担心获得医疗保健以生育亲生孩子(86.7%;χ2(3):16.805 p结论:2SLGBTQIA +受访者扩展了僵化的、异性恋的核心家庭模式,设想家庭由伴侣、亲生子女和收养/寄养子女、朋友和选择的家庭组成。所有性别的参与者都承认存在系统性的2gbtqia +歧视,跨性别/跨性别受访者尤其关注生殖保健方面的障碍。更好地了解2SLGBTQIA +个体的生殖决策可以促进更公平和包容的ART医疗保健。
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Exploring parenthood intentions and perceptions of infertility and assisted reproductive technology among 2SLGBTQIA + young adults in Ontario, Canada: a mixed methods study.

Background: As Generation Z two-spirit, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender/trans, queer, intersex, asexual and others who identify as part of sexual and gender diverse communities (2SLGBTQIA +) enter adulthood, contemplation of family creation may be challenged by biological and/or social infertility. Despite some advances in societal acceptance of gender and sexual minorities, family planning and reproductive healthcare remain heteronormative. To explore reproductive decision-making and how future families are conceptualized across genders, we evaluated perceptions of Ontario, Canada non-parenting, 2SLGBTQIA + emerging adults.

Methods: An online survey, designed as mixed-methods with sex-and-gender-based analysis (SGBA +), was used to recruit childless, post-secondary students, aged 18-30 years, in May-October 2022. Survey questions were analyzed by descriptive statistics across gender groups. Open-text responses were analyzed by thematic and content analysis.

Results: Parenthood intentions, conceptualizations of future family and perceptions of ART were described by 286 2SLGBTQIA + individuals, who were primarily Caucasian, cis women (69.2%), identified as bisexual-pansexual (66.4%), and belonged to Generation Z (85%). Only 33.9% of the sample definitively wanted children, with 33.6% unsure, and 32.5% preferring to remain childless. Themes describing participants' future family visions included: (i) committed partners are family, (ii) family includes children (subtheme: adoption/fostering as options for family creation), (iii) family values include love and acceptance, (iv) chosen families, and (v) families can be childfree. ART was acceptable in the event of future infertility, with two major themes used to describe perceived barriers to ART: (i) treatment is expensive; and (ii) I may face discrimination due to my gender identity/sexual orientation. Trans men were significantly more worried about healthcare access to have a biological child (86.7%; χ2(3):16.805 p < .001) than other genders.

Conclusions: 2SLGBTQIA + respondents expanded the rigid, heteronormative nuclear family model to envision families comprised of partners, biological and adoptive/foster children, friends and chosen family. Participants across genders recognized systemic 2SLGBTQIA + discrimination, with transgender/trans respondents particularly concerned about barriers to reproductive healthcare. A better understanding of reproductive decision-making by 2SLGBTQIA + individuals can contribute to more equitable and inclusive ART healthcare.

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来源期刊
Journal of Health, Population, and Nutrition
Journal of Health, Population, and Nutrition 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
49
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: Journal of Health, Population and Nutrition brings together research on all aspects of issues related to population, nutrition and health. The journal publishes articles across a broad range of topics including global health, maternal and child health, nutrition, common illnesses and determinants of population health.
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