Cult Health Sex
January 2025
Temporal constructs are central to reproduction and kinship, as epitomised by the pervasive concept of the biological clock within public imaginaries. While queer scholarship has problematised linear models of kinship and reproductive temporality, the specific temporalities associated with donor-conceived families have received less scholarly attention, despite the increasing prevalence of these family structures. In this article, we explore the question: how does donor conception reconfigure temporal logics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: There is compelling evidence of an inverse association between potassium intake and blood pressure (BP). A potential mechanism for this effect may be dietary potassium-mediated augmentation of endothelium-dependent relaxation. To date, studies have investigated potassium intake supplementation over several weeks in healthy volunteers with variable results on vascular function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrganofunctionalized borotungstate Keggin polyoxometalates, ( BuN)H[HBWO(P(O)Ph)] (PBW), ( BuN)H[HBWO(As(O)Ph)] (AsBW), and ( BuN)[HBWO(PhSiOSiPh)] (SiBW), were synthesized and structurally characterized. Cyclic voltammetry showed that the electronic properties of the clusters are dependent on the nature of the appended main group atoms (P, As, or Si). The first reduction potentials were found to shift positively with respect to that of the unmodified parent species ( BuN)[BWO], with PBW showing the largest shift at +100 mV.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSociological scholarship has begun to explore imaginaries of family and reproduction, yet less work has focused on the emerging social form of the donor family. In this article, we consider the embodied sociotechnical imaginaries of donor-conceived people, exploring their reflections, judgements, hopes, and predictions regarding donor conception. Combining reflexive thematic analysis of free-text survey responses from sperm donor-conceived ( = 90) and egg donor-conceived ( = 1) and data from semi-structured interviews with sperm donor-conceived people ( = 28), conceived in both clinical and non-clinical contexts in Australia, we analyse donor-conceived people's imaginings of family, identity, and the practice of donor conception in the digital age.
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