Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, School of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Research Institute of Child Development and Education, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Hum Reprod. 2023 Nov 2;38(11):2166-2174. doi: 10.1093/humrep/dead175.
How do adult offspring in planned lesbian-parent families feel about and relate to their donor (half) sibling(s) (DS)?
A majority of offspring had found DS and maintained good ongoing relationships, and all offspring (regardless of whether a DS had been identified) were satisfied with their knowledge of and contact level with the DS.
The first generation of donor insemination offspring of intended lesbian-parent families is now in their 30s. Coincident with this is an increased use of DNA testing and genetic ancestry websites, facilitating the discovery of donor siblings from a common sperm donor. Few studies of offspring and their DS include sexual minority parent (SMP) families, and only sparse data separately analyze the offspring of SMP families or extend the analyses to established adult offspring.
STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: This cohort study included 75 adult offspring, longitudinally followed since conception in lesbian-parent families. Quantitative analyses were performed from online surveys of the offspring in the seventh wave of the 36-year study, with a 90% family retention rate. The data were collected from March 2021 to November 2022.
PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: Participants were 30- to 33-year-old donor insemination offspring whose lesbian parents enrolled in a US prospective longitudinal study when these offspring were conceived. Offspring who knew of a DS were asked about their numbers found, characteristics or motivations for meeting, DS terminology, relationship quality and maintenance, and impact of the DS contact on others. All offspring (with or without known DS) were asked about the importance of knowing if they have DS and their terminology, satisfaction with information about DS, and feelings about future contact.
Of offspring, 53% (n = 40) had found DS in modest numbers, via a DS or sperm bank registry in 45% of cases, and most of these offspring had made contact. The offspring had their meeting motivations fulfilled, viewed the DS as acquaintances more often than siblings or friends, and maintained good relationships via meetings, social media, and cell phone communication. They disclosed their DS meetings to most relatives with neutral impact. The offspring, whether with known or unknown DS, felt neutral about the importance of knowing if they had DS, were satisfied with what they knew (or did not know) of the DS, and were satisfied with their current level of DS contact. This study is the largest, longest-running longitudinal study of intended lesbian-parent families and their offspring, and due to its prospective nature, is not biased by over-sampling offspring who were already satisfied with their DS.
LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION: The sample was from the USA, and mostly White, highly educated individuals, not representative of the diversity of donor insemination offspring of lesbian-parent families.
While about half of the offspring found out about DS, the other half did not. Regardless of knowing of a DS, these adult offspring of lesbian parents were satisfied with their level of DS contact. Early disclosure and identity formation about being donor-conceived in a lesbian-parent family may distinguish these study participants from donor insemination offspring and adoptees in the general population, who may be more compelled to seek genetic relatives. The study participants who sought DS mostly found a modest number of them, in contrast to reports in studies that have found large numbers of DS. This may be because one-third of study offspring had donors known to the families since conception, who may have been less likely to participate in commercial sperm banking or internet donation sites, where quotas are difficult to enforce or nonexistent. The study results have implications for anyone considering gamete donation, gamete donors, donor-conceived offspring, and/or gamete banks, as well as the medical and public policy professionals who advise them.
STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S): No funding was provided for this project. The authors have no competing interests.
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计划中的女同性恋父母家庭中的成年子女如何看待和与他们的供体(半)兄弟姐妹(DS)相关?
大多数子女都找到了 DS,并且保持着良好的持续关系,所有的子女(无论是否确定有 DS)都对他们对 DS 的了解程度和接触水平感到满意。
现在,有意向的女同性恋父母家庭的第一代捐赠者人工授精子女已经 30 多岁了。与此同时,DNA 测试和遗传祖先网站的使用也在增加,这使得从共同的精子供体中发现供体兄弟姐妹变得更加容易。很少有研究关注子女及其 DS 包括少数群体父母(SMP)家庭,只有零星的数据分别分析 SMP 家庭的子女,或者将分析扩展到已建立的成年子女。
研究设计、大小和持续时间:这项队列研究包括 75 名成年子女,自女同性恋父母家庭受孕以来一直进行纵向随访。对 36 年研究的第七波中进行在线调查的成年子女进行了定量分析,家庭保留率为 90%。数据收集于 2021 年 3 月至 2022 年 11 月。
参与者/材料、设置、方法:参与者是 30 至 33 岁的捐赠者人工授精子女,他们的女同性恋父母在这些子女受孕时参加了美国前瞻性纵向研究。已知 DS 的子女被问到他们发现的 DS 数量、与 DS 见面的特征或动机、DS 术语、关系质量和维护以及 DS 接触对他人的影响。所有子女(无论是否知道 DS)都被问到了解他们是否有 DS 的重要性以及他们的术语、对 DS 信息的满意度以及对未来接触的感受。
在子女中,53%(n=40)发现了数量适中的 DS,其中 45%的子女通过 DS 或精子库登记册发现,大多数子女都进行了接触。这些子女满足了他们的见面动机,更倾向于将 DS 视为熟人,而不是兄弟姐妹或朋友,并且通过见面、社交媒体和手机通讯保持良好的关系。他们向大多数亲戚透露了 DS 会议,对大多数亲戚的影响是中性的。无论是否知道 DS,这些子女都对知道他们是否有 DS 的重要性感到中立,对他们所知道的(或不知道的)DS 感到满意,对他们目前的 DS 接触水平感到满意。这项研究是规模最大、时间最长的有意向的女同性恋父母家庭及其子女的纵向研究,由于其前瞻性性质,不受对已经对 DS 满意的子女进行过度抽样的影响。
局限性、谨慎的原因:该样本来自美国,主要是白人,受过高等教育的个体,不能代表女同性恋父母家庭的捐赠者人工授精子女的多样性。
虽然大约一半的子女发现了 DS,但另一半没有。无论是否知道 DS,这些女同性恋父母的成年子女对他们与 DS 的接触水平感到满意。在女同性恋父母家庭中,早期披露和形成关于被捐赠者受孕的身份可能会使这些研究参与者与一般人群中的捐赠者人工授精子女和被领养者有所区别,他们可能更倾向于寻找遗传亲属。寻求 DS 的研究参与者大多发现了数量适中的 DS,与报告中发现大量 DS 的研究形成对比。这可能是因为三分之一的研究子女的供体从受孕开始就为家庭所熟知,他们可能不太可能参与商业精子库或互联网捐赠网站,这些网站的配额难以执行或不存在。研究结果对任何考虑配子捐赠、配子捐赠者、配子受孕子女和/或配子库的人,以及为他们提供建议的医疗和公共政策专业人员都有影响。
研究资金/利益冲突:本项目没有提供资金。作者没有利益冲突。
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