HuffPost's QuickRead...ShareBox.ad = function (tag_id){if ($(tag_id) == undefined) return; if ($(tag_id).innerHTML != '') return;ad_spec = {"zone_info": "huffpost.healthy-living","ord": 1356658605,"tile": 3,"width": 300,"height": 250,"el_id": tag_id + "_js","class_name": "ad_block ad_wide top","type": "iframe"}HuffPoUtil.WEDGJE.write(ad_spec, tag_id);};Loading... HuffPost's QuickRead... Loading... iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More Log in Create Account Notifications Profile Settings Logout #topnav_margin_btm { margin:0 !important } December 27, 2012 Edition: U.S. CA Canada FR France IT Italia ES España US United States UK United Kingdom FRONT PAGE Women WATCH: We Miss Nora Ephron So Much It Hurts16 12 Things I Learned for Sure in 2012330 Go to Women More in Women Love & Sex Career & Money Women's Health You might also like Style Weddings Divorce Parents Healthy Living Black Voices Latino Voices Taste 8 Holiday Movie-Watching Snacks Go to Taste More in Taste Recipes Baking Entertaining Healthy Eating Taste Tests Thanksgiving You might also like Food Healthy Living Travel OWN Good News WOW: Cop's Daring Attempt To Save Drowning Woman186 Kabang, Hero Dog With Missing Snout, Beats Cancer231 LOOK: 15 Animals Who Are Happy To Help Out11 WATCH: Little Girl's Hilarious Reaction While Visiting The Doctor WATCH: Teen's Incredible Rise From Team Mascot To Star Quarterback Go to Good News You might also like GPS for the Soul Weird News Comedy Impact Green Healthy Living Comedy Books Arts Parents WATCH: This 10-Year-Old Has An Incredible Talent502 Ken Jennings Debunks Popular Parenting Myths336 WATCH: Little Boy Cries Happy Tears Over His Christmas Gifts What To Name A Baby Born Around Christmas20 Factor May Predict A Baby's SIze Go to Parents More in Parents Parentry Moms Dads Screen Sense You might also like Education Food Taste Arts Teen Post 50 Style PHOTOS: President Obama's Vacation Outfit Is Supremely Unflattering1k PHOTOS: All Jennifer Aniston Wants For Christmas Is A Piña Colada403 PHOTOS: The British Royal Family Makes The Fashionable Walk To Church On Christmas189 The Best Street Style Of 201216 PHOTOS: Vogue's 2012 Covers Were Colorful, Model-Filled & Totally Awesome Go to Style More in Style The Beauty Page Fashion Trends Celebrity Style You might also like Home Women Parents Weddings Travel Divorce Post 50 Post 50 The 5 Foods Men Need To Eat22 Is Male Menopause Impacting Your Marriage?29 How Downton Abbey Is In My Blood JD McPherson: An Old-Fashioned Success in the New Media Musical World Want To Really Understand Why You Are Obese?51 Go to Post 50 More in Post 50 Reinvention Retirement Parenting Post50 Health Post50 Love Post50 You might also like Parents GPS for the Soul Women Money Healthy Living Religion LOOK: Christmas Around The World2k Hispanic Churches Confront A Language Dilemma530 Pope: Find Room For God8k 'May Peace Spring Up'95 Mexico's Bishop Inspires, Infuriates With Activism50 Go to Religion More in Religion Buddhism Christianity Hinduism Islam Judaism You might also like Arts World Healthy Living Impact GPS for the Soul Weddings 10 Reasons I’m Sure My Marriage Is Divorce-Proof305 PHOTOS: The Nicest (And Strangest!) Gifts You Got For Christmas Go to Weddings More in Weddings Planning 101 Etiquette and Advice Indiebride Honeymoons Destination Weddings Weddings 2.0 After the Wedding You might also like Style Travel Food Divorce Inside Bethenny Frankel's Split 90 21 Ultimate Dating Dealbreakers25 'Spy Kids' Star Alexa Vega Finalizes Divorce 60 10 Technology Traps To Beware Of In Divorce Why I'm Taking Back Christmas62 Go to Divorce More in Divorce Celebrity Divorce Parenting Dating Divorce Laws Divorce Stats Divorce Advice You might also like Healthy Living Travel Women Recipes LIVE Next Make The NRA Pay Next Dangerous Face Drugs Later Why Your Ex Was The Best Later Weed Cigarettes Go to HuffPost Live ALL SECTIONS NewsPoliticsWorldBusinessSmall BusinessMoneyMediaSportsEducationCrimeWeird NewsGood NewsEntertainmentEntertainmentCelebrityComedyArts & CultureBooksTVMoviefoneLife & StyleHealthy LivingGPS for the SoulStyleHomeFoodTaste WeddingsTravelParentsDivorceHuff/Post 50Marlo ThomasOWNTech & ScienceTechScienceGreenTEDWeekendsTechCrunchEngadgetTUAWJoystiqVoicesWomenBlack VoicesLatino VoicesVoces (en español)Gay VoicesReligionCollegeTeenImpactLocalChicagoDCDenverDetroitMiamiNew YorkLos AngelesSan FranciscoPatch.comMapquestOur Mobile Apps iPhoneiPadHuffPost Live iPadAndroid PhoneAndroid Tablet Healthy LivingHealth and FitnessGPS for the SoulHealth NewsSleepGeneration WhyHealthy Living VideosHoroscopes
Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributorsHot on the BlogGreta Van SusterenTrita ParsiBill MoyersRev. Al Sharpton HuffPost Social Reading Some error occurred Login with Facebook to see what your friends are reading Enable Social Reading i Settings Read Share Settings Share everything I read Share only things safe for work Dont share what I'm reading Read Share History Learn More
Elizabeth GregoryAuthor, 'Ready: Why Women Are Embracing the New Later Motherhood' GET UPDATES FROM Elizabeth Gregory Like 15 Aging Sperm? Not the World's End Posted: 12/27/2012 6:20 pm React Amazing
Inspiring
Funny
Scary
Hot
Crazy
Important
Weird
Read more Judith Shulevitz , Male Fertility , Women Fertility , Age Sperm , Aging Sperm , Fertility , Fertility Fear , Fertility Research , Fertility Scaremongering , Fertility Treatment , Fertility Treatments , Health News , Infertility , Later Dads , Later Moms , Later Motherhood , Male Infertility , Older Dads , Sperm Donation , Sperm Fertility , Healthy Living News
#news_entries #ad_sharebox_260x60 img {padding:0px;margin:0px} share this story Submit this storydiggredditstumble
Judith Shulevitz's recent New Republic essay on how later parenthood is "upending American society" claims that delaying kids could lead us down a rabbit hole of genetic decline. The piece gathers much of its energy from new studies suggesting that male sperm quality decays with age.
While female infertility is old news, issues with male fertility create a new cultural frisson. Apparently, genetic errors may be introduced into sperm every time they divide -- which is often. So the children of some older men may have issues, cognitive and physical, that the kids of younger men don't generally face (at least not due to their dad's contribution to their DNA).
There's a lot of emphasis on the word "may" in the New Republic piece, since most of the evidence it's based on is inconclusive. And there's a strong element of anecdote as well. Fertility catastrophizing is an ongoing sport. Here are some links to other fertility scaremongering pieces of the past few years that turned out to be not the big problems the headlines suggested: the ovarian reserve scare, the later-parenthood autism scare, and the childlessness scare. Earlier this month we had the low-birth-rate scare (which turns out to really be about young women delaying kids in order to establish themselves -- a time-lag effect).
In the case of new dads over 50, several studies do suggest that their kids may have a higher rate of schizophrenia (about 1 percent) than those of younger dads (about 0.25 percent), and there may be links to other ailments. Time, and more completed studies, will tell. The same is true of studies of the effects of fertility treatments like Clomid on both kids and moms, which the essay also raises as potentially devolutionary. The data is still in the gathering stages.
As there has been all along, there's reason to ask women and their doctors to think through their fertility options before turning to fertility tech and drugs. Firm data on rates of pregnancy in the late 30s and early 40s is scarce, because doctors can't mandate that a big group of people have unprotected sex constantly for the sake of an experiment. But one study indicates that most women not already known to have an endocrinal disorder or blockage will get pregnant without aid in their late 30s within two years. Many find two years too long a wait before seeking fertility boosters -- and certainly it's reasonable for women to get their hardware checked out early on in their fertility efforts, or even before they're ready to start trying for kids. But of the 580,000 kids born to women 35 and over in 2010, only 5 percent involved IVF (per CDC and SART 2010 data). We can't track how many involved Clomid or IUI. For more on rates of decline, click here.
Fertility treatments should be more regulated and tracked than they are. We know little about the long-term effects of the treatments we're using on a wide scale. But it's my opinion the presentation of data in this essay is questionable. Potential problems should be noted and discussed, but there's no basis for jumping to end-of-the-world conclusions. We are not falling off a fertility cliff.
Looking at the same question from the positive side, at least such hand wringing does open up discussion of these issues. Suggestions of declining quality of sperm among later dads shares out some of the weight that's been jammed on the shoulders of later moms in our fertility discourse.
Different from older moms' situation, however, these male fertility issues are addressable with relative ease. For women, IVF and egg donation involve injections of high doses of hormones with unknown long-term effects, huge expense for each attempt, and ethical questions over the use of poorer women's genetic material for the benefit of richer couples.
By comparison, for men worried about potential issues with their aging reproductive materials, arranging for sperm donation is a breeze. The cost is negligible, and no risky hormone injections are required. If you want familial DNA connections, there's the real option for many of using a nephew's sperm -- or that of a younger brother. Or, if you don't have such a handy relative, or it's not a real option given your family dynamic but you do hope to propagate your own DNA, you can push for further research around generation of new sperm cells from an individual's adult stem cells, skin cells or other tissue. If perfected, such advances could allow men (and, interestingly, women too!) to generate new sperm cells bearing their DNA. These would be free of the genetic errors that older sperm have, because they haven't divided as often. Some animal experiments along these lines have been successful.
The understanding that spermatic dynamism fades with time may surprise us for a few minutes. But viewed in wider context, it's not the end of the world, guys. Modern fertility is changing at lightning speed, and along with it the stratification of tasks based on gender. Many of our old-world assumptions are being upended. But for women, men, families, and society, the new options introduced by control of fertility are largely positive and open the way to ongoing positive cultural evolution.
For more on this topic: click here.
This post first appeared on RHReality Check.
Reference:
1. This data is from the European Fecundability Study, documented in David Dunson, Donna Baird, and Bernardo Colombo, "Increased Infertility with Age in Men and Women," Obstetrics and Gynecology 103 (2004): 57-62, and in other research, cited in Gregory, Ready: Why Women Are Embracing the New Later Motherhood (New York: Basic Books, 2012 edition, p. 286).
For more by Elizabeth Gregory, click here.
For more health news, click here.
This Blogger's Books from Ready: Why Women Are Embracing the New Later Motherhoodby Elizabeth Gregory
Follow Elizabeth Gregory on Twitter:www.twitter.com/egregory
FOLLOW HEALTHY LIVING Like 40k Get Alerts #ad_bottom_article_text {margin-bottom: 15px} Infertility Loading... More in Healthy Living...Silly Diets, Silly Food Inventions and Other...A Doctor's Best FriendHealth Trends 2012: What We Don't Want...Overindulging Can Take A Toll On Your... Comments0Pending Comments0 View FAQ Previewing Your Comment. This comment has not yet been posted You have exceeded your word limit by words. Please click the "Edit" button and shorten your comment.
Post Comment Edit Cancel
You can post to us this information Contact us Click here to leave a comment.HuffPost High School welcomes a lively, thoughtful debate in the comment section. Keep in mind that the articles here are penned by young authors, so please keep criticism respectful, and help us to keep this a safe and supportive place for writers of all ages to contribute.Post CommentPreview Comment To reply to a Comment: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to. Post Comment Preview Comment To reply to a Comment: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to.
Share your Comment:
Post to Facebook. Post to Blogger. Post to Twitter. Post to WordPress. Post to TypePad. Post to Tumblr. Post to Yahoo! Blogger login: Blogger password: Select blog: refresh list Remember me: Wordpress host: Wordpress login: Wordpress password: Remember me: TypePad host: TypePad login: TypePad password: Select blog: refresh list Remember me: Tumblr login: Tumblr password: Remember me: Community Notice: We've made some changes to our badge program, including the additionof our newest badge: Community Curator. View All Recency | Popularity new comment(s) on this entry — Click to refreshLoading comments… #ad_sponsorship .module .title:before{border-bottom:transparent solid 10px;border-right:hsla(0, 0%, 0%, 0.1) solid 21px;bottom:-12px;content:'';display:block;height:2px;left:0;position:absolute;}#ad_sponsorship .module .title:after{border-bottom:transparent solid 10px;border-right:#afafaf solid 20px;bottom:-10px;content:'';display:block;height:0;left:0;position:absolute;}#ad_sponsorship .module .hd {position:relative;border-top-left-radius: 5px;border-top-right-radius: 5px;color: #FFFFFF;height: 30px;margin:5px 0 5px; }#ad_sponsorship .module .hd .title{float:left;margin:7px 0 0 10px;}#zoc_doc_wrapper { padding-left:20px;padding-top:10px; }TAKE CARE OF YOUR SMILE FOLLOW US Connect with your friends Check out stories you might like,
and see what your friends are sharing! Most Popular on Healthy Living It Wasn't Autocorrect, It Was A Stroke
Like 258 The Toll Overindulging Might Be Taking On Your Lifespan
Like 89 10 Celebrities Who Faced Health Struggles In 2012
Like 7 Top 6 New Year's Resolution Tips
Like 124 7 Simple Ways To Take Care Of Yourself Over The Holidays
Like 24 Don't Miss HuffPost Bloggers1 of 5Greta Van SusterenThe Washington Secret (or Is It Washington Lie?): Don’t Believe the 10-year Plans They Are Pedaling to YouTrita ParsiMore Than Just About HagelBill MoyersThe Most Underreported News Story of 2012 Is...Rev. Al Sharpton2012: The Year the Rich Couldn’t BuyDavid BromwichChuck Hagel and the Trial-Balloon MethodTed DansonChile Enacts Landmark Fishing Reforms, Protects All SeamountsMichael MooreCelebrating the Prince of Peace in the Land of GunsSugar Ray LeonardImagine a World Without DiabetesCory BookerIt’s Time to Emphasize Pragmatic and Achievable Gun Law ReformDr. Peggy DrexlerHow to Stay Guilt-Free This Holiday Season MOST DISCUSSED RIGHT NOW2RgnQXLokElFimSGDV8i8a43pip0bdKPiJKomeBLqmM3QvAVQ0trgKQA9zRBn5c91 of 2 10 Health Trends In 2012 That We DON'T Want To See In 2013
Want To Drop Those Extra Few Pounds? Walk, Don't Drive
HOT ON FACEBOOK2RgnQXLokElFimSGDV8i8TKPvBq8xPkmgYINREC4w8w%3DiJKomeBLqmM3QvAVQ0trgPTAYkCdRanfpr%2BnvSQA9QM%3DjpeKJKgSs0bJPlRX0pV4Fss35VaaM%2Fhsd5ArrOAf1yA%3DaCyn79EDDF3Pcy%2BKO9vMyQ%3D%3D1 of 3 It Wasn't Autocorrect, It Was A Stroke
The 6 People Giving You A Cold
HUFFPOST'S BIG NEWS PAGES Kiplinger's 100 Best Value Public Colleges 2012 (PHOTOS)Video Montana Senate Seat Retained By Democrats Thanks To Boost From Dark MoneyMontana Delfina Food Fight Video: Restaurant Group Makes Slow-Motion Holiday Tribute (VIDEO)San Francisco Restaurants Joe Arpaio Accepted Award From Confederate Heritage GroupArizona Politics 5x5x5: Jacquelline Fuller, Google's Director of Giving, On The Global Impact Awards And Shaping InnovationWater Jade Morris, Child Missing After Casino Stabbing, Found DeadCrime Countrywide Loans Not In Violation Of Ethics Rules, House Committee FindsCongress Dalton Dingus, Boy With Cystic Fibrosis, Hopes To Set Record For Most Christmas Cards Received (VIDEO)Christmas Norman Schwarzkopf Dead: Retired General Dies At Age 78Florida more big news pages »
Advertise | Make HuffPost your Home Page | RSS | Careers | FAQ User Agreement | Privacy | Comment Policy | About Us | About Our Ads | Contact Us Copyright © 2012 TheHuffingtonPost.com, Inc. | "The Huffington Post" is a registered trademark of TheHuffingtonPost.com, Inc. All rights reserved. Part of AOL Lifestyle
HuffPost Lightbox
0 comments:
Post a Comment