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Vol. 4, No. 1, 2006
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[ contents
] Vol 4, No 1, 2006,
pp: 15-27
An Overview
of Assisted Reproduction in Australia and Directions for
Social Research
Author: Karen Bell
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abstract |
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Public interest in assisted reproduction
(AR) has remained high since the birth of the first ‘test
tube baby’ in the United Kingdom in 1978. Australian
scientists have been frontrunners in the development and
implementation of reproductive technology and recently,
there has been renewed debate about government funding
and access to AR. This paper provides a timely overview
of reproductive technology services in Australia and examines
the body of social research on the impacts of this technology,
particularly previous research on how women and their
partners experience assisted reproduction procedures.
The popular expectations of success are compared to the
latest success rates. It is argued that there is a need
for more social research to counterbalance the dominance
of the biomedical aspects of AR, in particular, for more
research into people’s actual experiences of AR,
expectations of the likelihood of success, access issues
and on the general impact of involuntary childlessness.
Key Words – Assisted reproduction; involuntary childlessness;
infertility; IVF; women
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Karen
Bell is a PhD candidate and teaches
in the Human Services and Social Work program at Charles
Sturt University.
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