AI Article Synopsis

  • The study looked at how college students feel about having kids in the future, their worries about getting pregnant later, and what they know about fertility as they age.
  • About 62.5% of the surveyed students want children, but many (68.3%) plan to wait, especially females and premed students because of school and job goals.
  • Most students are anxious about how their careers may affect their chances of having kids, and many want to learn more about fertility since their knowledge about it is not very strong.

Article Abstract

Objectives: To assess childbearing intentions, concerns about future fertility, knowledge about the age-related decline in fertility, and interest in receiving fertility education among undergraduate students.

Design: From March to April 2021, a cross-sectional, web-based survey with 42 reproductive and fertility-related questions was administered to and completed by actively enrolled undergraduates at Northwestern University in the United States.

Results: The survey was completed by 291 students (mean age 20.2 years). Of all participants, 62.5% plan to have children and 68.3% intend to delay childbearing. Significantly more females than males (70.7% vs 40.9%,  = 0.004) and premedical students compared to non-premedical students (78.2% vs 60.1%,  = 0.002) reported planning to delay childbearing due to educational or career aspirations. Significantly more females than males (43.5% vs 4.5%,  < 0.001) and premedical compared to non-premedical students (50.4% vs 31.5%,  = 0.002) also reported having anxiety about future fertility due to career aspirations.When surveyed about fertility knowledge, 31.1% of participants reported that females are as fertile in their forties as they are in their thirties, and 25.4% stated that female fertility does not dramatically decline until age 40 or later. When asked to estimate the oldest age a woman has conceived using autologous oocytes, 83.3% reported age 48 or older. Of all participants, 72.3% were interested in learning about fertility.

Conclusions: The majority of surveyed undergraduates plan to delay childbearing, yet they have concerns about how career goals will impact future fertility. Notably, females and premedical students reported higher rates of anxiety when compared to their male and non-premedical counterparts. Knowledge about the age-related decline in fertility was limited, but students have a strong interest in learning about fertility, highlighting an opportunity for educational intervention at the undergraduate level. With education, students may be empowered to make informed decisions about future reproductive strategy earlier in time, potentially decreasing future anxiety.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10034448PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e14623DOI Listing

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