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Public Understanding of Science
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"Public" perceptions of gamete donation: a research review

Nicky Hudson

School of Applied Social Sciences at De Montfort University, nhudson{at}dmu.ac.uk

Lorraine Culley

De Montfort University, Leicester

Frances Rapport

School of Medicine, Swansea University

Mark Johnson

Mary Seacole Research Centre and UK

Aditya Bharadwaj

University of Edinburgh

This paper reviews the literature on "public" perceptions of the practice of gamete (egg and sperm) donation in the treatment of infertility. Despite regular "consultation" exercises in the UK on the manner in which infertility treatments should be regulated, there is little sense of how a range of public groups respond to developments in this area. The key themes from thirty-three articles, chapters and reports are discussed. The review reveals the limited nature of our current knowledge of public understandings of and attitudes towards gamete donation as a form of infertility treatment which has been readily available and widely practiced for many years. The review is critical of the methodological and epistemological basis of much of the work in this area and argues that there is a strong case for social scientific research to attempt to capture the perceptions of a wider range of people who are rarely included in formal public consultations and often similarly excluded from research studies.

This version was published on January 1, 2009

Public Understanding of Science, Vol. 18, No. 1, 61-77 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0963662507078396


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