This roundup is incredibly valuable. The Kasirye finding about 62% discomfort with anonymity removal juxtaposed against 59% believing offspring should know their origens really captures the tension inherent in sperm donation. The gap between heterosexual and non-heterosexual donors' motivations (45% vs 70% on financial compensation) deserves deeper exploration—wondering if that reflects diferent community norms around commodification.
Thank you! The finding about discomfort with the removal of anonymity law was also interesting, given that it happened in 2005, but it makes more sense as 71% reported being unaware of current donation regulations. The paper doesn't help me understand how they framed the actual question to respondents. I was also surprised that heterosexual couples were the least preferred recipients.
This roundup is incredibly valuable. The Kasirye finding about 62% discomfort with anonymity removal juxtaposed against 59% believing offspring should know their origens really captures the tension inherent in sperm donation. The gap between heterosexual and non-heterosexual donors' motivations (45% vs 70% on financial compensation) deserves deeper exploration—wondering if that reflects diferent community norms around commodification.
Thank you! The finding about discomfort with the removal of anonymity law was also interesting, given that it happened in 2005, but it makes more sense as 71% reported being unaware of current donation regulations. The paper doesn't help me understand how they framed the actual question to respondents. I was also surprised that heterosexual couples were the least preferred recipients.