Social age deadlines for the childbearing of women and men

BACKGROUND

This study examines whether social age deadlines exist for childbearing in women and men, how they vary across countries, whether they are lower than actual biological deadlines and whether they are associated with childbearing at later ages and the availability of assisted reproduction techniques (ARTs).

METHODS

This study is based on the European Social Survey, Round 3 (2006–2007), which covers 25 countries. Data were gathered on social age deadlines for childbearing in women (21 909 cases) and men (21 239 cases) from samples of representative community-dwelling populations aged 15 and older.

RESULTS

Social age deadlines for childbearing were perceived more frequently for women than men. These deadlines are often lower than actual biological limits, and for women and men alike: 57.2% of respondents perceived a maternal social age deadline ≤40 years of age; 46.2% of the respondents perceived a paternal social age deadline ≤45 years of age. There is also considerable variability in deadlines across countries, as well as within them. At the country level, the presence of social age deadlines for the childbearing of women was negatively associated with birth rates at advanced ages and the prevalence of ART, and later deadlines were positively associated with these factors.

CONCLUSIONS

It is important to understand the factors that increase and limit late fertility. While biological factors condition fertility, so do social expectations. These findings provide widespread evidence across Europe that social limits exist alongside biological ones, though both sets of factors are more binding for women.

‘Mama and papa nothing’: living with infertility among an urban population in Kigali, Rwanda

BACKGROUND

Not being able to procreate has severe social and economic repercussions in resource-poor countries. The purpose of this research was to explore the consequences of female and/or male factor infertility for men and women in Rwanda.

METHODS

Both quantitative and qualitative methods were used. Couples presenting with female and/or male factor infertility problems at the infertility clinic of the Kigali University Teaching Hospital (n= 312), and fertile controls who recently delivered (n= 312), were surveyed about domestic violence, current and past relationships and sexual functioning. In addition, five focus group discussions were held with a subsample of survey participants, who were either patients diagnosed with female- or male-factor fertility or their partners.

RESULTS

Domestic violence, union dissolutions and sexual dysfunction were reported more frequently in the survey by infertile than fertile couples. The psycho-social consequences suffered by infertile couples in Rwanda are severe and similar to those reported in other resource-poor countries. Although women carry the largest burden of suffering, the negative repercussions of infertility for men, especially at the level of the community, are considerable. Whether the infertility was caused by a female factor or male factor was an important determinant for the type of psycho-social consequences suffered.

CONCLUSIONS

In Rwanda, as in other resource-poor countries, infertility causes severe suffering. There is an urgent need to recognize infertility as a serious reproductive health problem and to put infertility care on the public health agenda.

Adolescents of the US National Longitudinal Lesbian Family Study: the impact of having a known or an unknown donor on the stability of psychological adjustment

BACKGROUND

The current study is based on the US National Longitudinal Lesbian Family Study (NLLFS), which was designed to document the development of the first generation of lesbian families with children conceived through donor insemination. Data were collected in five waves, first at insemination or during pregnancy, and subsequently when the index children were 2, 5, 10 and 17 years old. The study is ongoing, with a 93% retention rate to date. The purpose of the current investigation was to assess changes in psychological adjustment of the index offspring between the time that they were 10 and 17 years old (T4 and T5) and to examine the effects of having a known or an as-yet-unknown donor.

METHODS

The total T5 sample consisted of 78 adolescents. The mothers in 74 families completed a Child Behaviour Checklist (CBCL) on their offspring at both T4 and T5: 26 of these offspring had been conceived through known sperm donors and 48 through unknown donors. Changes in psychological adjustment were assessed through computations of stability coefficients between T4 and T5 on all CBCL subscales, and by means of a general linear model (GLM).

RESULTS

On 10 out of 11 CBCL subscales, the stability coefficients were not significantly different for adolescents with known and unknown donors. Findings from the GLM showed that no main effect for donor type was found; for offspring in both donor groups thought problems and rule-breaking behaviour were higher and scores on social problems and aggressive behaviour were lower at T5 than T4.

CONCLUSIONS

The development of psychological well-being in the offspring of lesbian mothers over a 7-year period from childhood through adolescence is the same for those who were conceived through known and unknown donors.

Sperm and oocyte donors’ experiences of anonymous donation and subsequent contact with their donor offspring

BACKGROUND

This study examined the motivations and experiences of anonymous donors who decide to make themselves open to contact with their donor offspring.

METHODS

Online questionnaires were completed by 63 sperm donors and 11 oocyte donors recruited via the Donor Sibling Registry (http://www.donorsiblingregistry.com/), a US-based international registry that facilitates contact between donor-conceived offspring and their donors.

RESULTS

Donors' main reasons for donating were financial payment and wanting to help others. Sperm donors had donated between 1 and 950 times (median = 100) and oocyte donors had donated between 1 and 5 times (median = 2). The majority of sperm donors and more than one-third of oocyte donors expressed concerns about having donated. These concerns were mainly about the well-being of any children conceived using their gametes and not being able to make contact with them. Most sperm and oocyte donors felt that it was important to know how many offspring had been born using their donation, and 51% of sperm donors and 46% of oocyte donors wanted identifying information. All of the donors who had contact with their donor offspring reported positive experiences and the majority continued to have regular contact.

CONCLUSIONS

Although the sample may not be representative of all anonymous donors, this study highlights the importance of donors having access to information about their donor offspring and the positive consequences that may arise when contact is made.

Decisional conflict and the disposition of frozen embryos: implications for informed consent

BACKGROUND

Fertility patients often struggle with decisions about disposition of embryos remaining after fertility treatment. We aimed to identify predictors and correlates of decisional conflict among patients facing these decisions.

METHODS

We analyzed results from a survey of 2210 patients from nine geographically diverse US fertility clinics. The main outcome measure was decisional conflict about embryo disposition, as measured by the decisional conflict scale (DCS).

RESULTS

Of 1244 respondents who returned the survey, 1005 with cryopreserved embryos and DCS scores were included in the analysis. Of the respondents, 39% reported high decisional conflict (DCS ≥ 37.5). Thoughts about future childbearing were associated with high decisional conflict: respondents who were either uncertain about whether to have a baby in the future or sure they did not want to have a baby were at higher odds of high decisional conflict than participants who desired a baby [adjusted odds ratio (aOR) = 3.93, P < 0.001 and aOR = 1.69, P = 0.04, respectively]. Also associated with high decisional conflict were being likely to have embryos thawed and discarded (aOR = 2.08, P < 0.001), donated for research (aOR = 1.66, P = 0.01) or frozen ‘forever’ (aOR = 1.90, P = 0.01); being likely to choose compassionate transfer if it were available (aOR = 1.65, P = 0.03); attributing high, but not full, moral status to human embryos; not having enough information; and not being satisfied with the informed consent process.

CONCLUSIONS

Decisional conflict about frozen embryo disposition differs according to reproductive preferences that may vary according to stage of treatment. Informed consent for embryo disposition should be revisited periodically, with serious discussions about disposition after childbearing is complete.

Memo to Men: To Live Longer, Take Better Care of Your Body

(HealthDay News) -- As a general rule, men take lousy care of their health.

They shrug off injuries. They hate going to the doctor for anything. They pay little heed to warning signs for major health issues.

And the results of all that manliness are evident in the statistics. According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services:

One in five American men has heart disease.
One in three adult men in the United States has high blood pressure.
Three in four American men are overweight.
Men overall are less healthy and have a shorter life span than women, according to the Men's Health Network, a national nonprofit group that promotes healthy living for men. And more than half of all premature deaths among men are preventable.

"Men are leading in nine out of the top 10 causes of death," said Scott Williams, vice president of the network. "I feel like we're starting behind where health is concerned, compared to women."

The main way men can improve the length and quality of their lives, Williams said, is to start taking a personal interest in their health. Read more...

Immunice for Immune Support

The Seasteading Institute launches The Magellan Network

To help us create a realistic and sustainable seasteading movement, The Seasteading Institute is proudly launching The Magellan Network. The Magellan Network is a network for individuals interested in active exploration and prototyping of business models related to novel legal environments on the ocean. It is an invitation-only group geared towards those who are best able to make progress towards this goal: investors, entrepreneurs, and accomplished business professionals.

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How to Make Your Laptop Last Longer

With the passing of the recent holiday season, many of us are assessing our finances and vowing to be more frugal in the new year. Making money stretch is an important financial skill, and maintaining our expensive assets is a big component in any responsible budget. Your new computer is one such asset that needs to be properly serviced and kept in order to last for years. Neglected machines need to be replaced every year, or else they become unbearably slow and miserable to use. Thankfully, there are many easy steps that can be taken to ensure that this does not happen to your PC.

Install a Real-Time Virus Scanner

computer crash

Real-time virus scanners are your first line of defense against the malicious infections that threaten to destroy your new computer. Viruses almost always come from online activity, and are usually installed on your computer from an infected download. The unfortunate reality is that you can never be sure which downloads are safe, and which could be dangerous – you might think you’re downloading a great new game, and before you know it your computer is under siege from a virus infection.

This is why a real-time scanner is necessary for responsible computing. If you rely on a manual scanner (i.e., one that you have to run every time you use it) you will only catch viruses that have already infected your PC and broken pieces of the operating system. Real-time scanners are always running and will prevent infections before they take over your machine.

Don’t Keep It Near a Window

window

When setting up your new computer, avoid positioning it near a window. Sometimes this can seem like the ideal set-up, since a desk facing a window provides a soothing view of your property, however windows pose a special danger to computers that could significantly reduce their lifespan. Technology resource Factoidz.com notes that windows attract the most moisture and dust of any area in a room.

The temperature difference between the inside of your home and outside world causes the moisture in the air to collect on and around the window. Having a computer right against it can draw dust, moisture, and mold into the hardware. Needless to say, introducing such unwanted material to your machine can slowly destroy it over time.

Clean Inside The Case

cpu fan dust

Even if you avoid placing your computer near a window, all machines slowly collect dust and dirt inside of their case. The cooling fans inside of the case are always spinning when the PC is on, drawing in air from around the room. This happens even faster when the computer sits on or very close to the floor, as carpets and rugs are natural collectors of dust and lint. Left unadressed, this material can gather in huge quantities, contributing to hardware breakdown and computer crashes.

Don’t let grime invade your PC and ruin it from the inside out. Instead, pick up a small shop vacuum with hose attachments for cleaning small, fragile areas. The ones sold by DataVac are a good choice, as they are made for cleaning technology. Every six months, undo the screws on your desktop case and vacuum out the dust that has accumulated on the hardware. This will help ensure the longevity of your hardware and keep your machine operating like new for a long time.

Defrag Regularly

hard drive

The longer a computer is used, the more “fragmented” it’s hard drive becomes. Put simply, this means that related files get scattered around and the system has to take longer to find them as you use programs. This contributes to lagging, freezing, and general system slowness. To solve this problem, your computer comes with a defrag (known in Windows as “Disk Defragmenter”) utility that moves like files together and dramatically speeds up the entire user experience.

A complete system defrag generally takes a good bit of time, sometimes an hour or more depending on the size of your drive and the amount of the stuff you have saved on it. Schedule a time to defrag your machine once a month, and set it to run when you will not be using it (such as before you go to sleep or leave for work in the morning). Regular hard drive maintenance will keep your programs loading and running as smooth as the first day you brought it home.

Maintain The Registry

registry

The Windows registry is an often neglected part of your operating system that requires sound maintenance to run at optimal performance. This is the part of your system where every program stores its settings, and each setting is known as a key. The problem is that as you install and delete software over time, many registry keys get left behind from old programs you no longer use. These junk keys clog up the registry and cause the system to begin to slow.

To maintain optimal system performance, install a registry maintenance tool and run scheduled, monthly cleanings. PCTools makes an acclaimed registry tool called Registry Mechanic that will keep your system’s registry running at peak performance for the life of your machine.

Don’t Forget About Spyware

spyware

While spyware is not quite as prevalent as it was in the early-mid 2000’s, it is still a threat that demands your proactive attention. Spyware behaves much like a virus, installing itself through hidden and non-consensual download tactics and spreading through the computer’s operating system once there. Spyware displays unwanted advertising, edits system settings without permission, installs other software, and can slow the machine to a halt at its worst. Some of the really malicious variants even harvest personal data (such as credit card numbers, social security numbers, etc) and send them back to their creator for purposes of identity theft.

Many virus scanners come with anti-spyware software as well, but it is always a safe bet to keep a separate anti-spyware tool installed as well for extra protection. Lavasoft AdAware and Spybot Search & Destroy are two of the most highly acclaimed anti-spyware suites, and can both be downloaded for free. Much like anti-virus software, you will need to keep your program’s definitions up to date to remain defended against the latest infections to hit the web.

Set a Stand By Timer

timer

Leaving your computer running for days on end can wear down your hardware components and contribute to system crashes and loss of performance. However, constant shutting down and starting up of the computer forces it to heat up and cool down several times per day, which is also dangerous for the PC. The best way to handle your computer when you aren’t using it is to set a stand-by timer. This is an easy system setting that puts your computer into sleep mode when you don’t use it for a certain amount of time (usually around 15-30 minutes).

Sleep mode powers down most of your moving components (such as the hard drive) and screen, keeping only the bare minimum of settings on so that your desktop can be recalled quickly when you return to the keyboard. Not only does this preserve system integrity, it also saves electricity, making it a frugal setting to enable. Of course, a good system restart is good for the machine every couple of days, so make sure to reboot it several times each week.

About the Author: Brian Tanner is a freelance writer for HP. Since 1939, HP has been making technology products to help people and companies address their problems and challenges, and realize their possibilities, aspirations and dreams. On their website you can find a printer to printer ink.

Are you interested in guest blogging with Romow blogs? Submit an unpublished original article to us, and we will be happy to review it for publication.

iTunes 10: So Long, Ringtone Creator – Thanks for the Memories

On September 3rd, Apple released its 10th iteration of the incredibly popular iTunes application in the last nine years. While some interesting additional functionality was added (behold the “Ping” feature, which integrates social media and music), savvy iTunes users noticed some things were missing, including the Ringtone Creator.

The ringtone creator was first introduced in iTunes version 7.4, released in September of 2007. The feature allowed users to take mp3s located in their iTunes libraries and, for a nominal fee of $0.99, transform a snippet of the mp3 into a ringtone usable with their iPhone.

itunes-10The ringtone feature, though appreciated at least in the cosmetic sense by Apple enthusiasts, overall seemed like a head scratcher to the average Apple user. After all, why would you buy a song for $0.99 and then pay another $0.99 to have the privilege of it alerting you to an incoming call? $2 for a ringtone is a bit steep; while Apple defended their pricing as a result of the stingy licensing of the music industry, they eventually got the hint (3 years later) that no one in their right mind would pay that much for a customized ringtone.

In fact, today no one in their right mind would pay a dime for a customized ringtone. There are so many free online applications that will let you customize a ringtone from an mp3 on your computer in under three minutes that charging for a ringtone is clearly a stunt catering only to the lazy or severely technologically challenged.

Mobile17, a dotcom start-up by a college kid, has gone from campy dorm-room experiment to an honest to goodness business. After creating a free account, the user has the ability to upload any mp3 onto the Mobile17 server and select the exact start and end point of their desired ringtone. You can select clips up to a minute in length, and after you fill in specific information about your phone and carrier (for proper processing purposes), the clip will be processed and emailed or texted to your phone. You simple download onto your phone and select the ringtone from your library. Voila – your free, customized ringtone has been created and delivered in no time!

While Mobile17 was among the first to offer such a service, there are now dozens of site online that perform similar processes. When choosing a site to make your free ringtone, just remember to be smart of who you share your information with and what information you share. Unless you buy some kind of a ringtone package from a reputable site (look for that Better Business Bureau seal and official credit card logos!), do not share your address, credit card, or social security number with anyone. Lots of sites try to lure in naïve internet users with free services like “make your own ringtones” as a way to gain access to their personal information. When in doubt about a site’s credibility, do a Google search on site name along with the term “review” to see what comes up – the nice thing about the internet is that if someone has a bad experience or gets scammed, they are not shy talking about it!

It’s a free ringtone world, and while the idea of the iTunes ringtone creator will be missed, chances are the actual service won’t be missed at all – in fact, from the internet chatter around the issue, few people noticed (or cared). But thanks for trying iTunes/Apple; the mark of a great company isn’t the number of failed ideas it has, but the number of good ones.


About the Author: Vernon Marker is both a music and Apple product fanatic. He is always ahead of the curve when it comes to new releases and prides herself on having the coolest cell ringtones before anyone else! In his free time he loves to travel and attend as many concerts as possible.

Are you interested in guest blogging with Romow.com? Submit your guest blog post and we will be happy to review it.

The Dark Side of the Lens

The Dark Side of the Lens by Astray Films is a stunning video worth all six minutes of your attention. The photography by Alan Wilson is amazing. The color and temperature of the waves look absolutely beautiful in every frame and really touches on the narrator’s passion for surfing and capturing the moment on a camera. The piece itself is very inspiring, not necessarily in a sense that I want to get out and surf (although I do) but in the sense that you should always pursue your passion regardless of economic outcome, so long as you are happy.

Find the original video here

Remembering Pearl Harbor in Honolulu, Hawaii

Pearl Harbor

Yesterday, the United States remembered the tragic events that occurred at Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. 59 years ago, the U.S. officially entered World War II after a devastating attack that left over 2,400 U.S. soldiers dead and almost 1,300 wounded. The memorial site is both beautiful and haunting and it attracts over 1.5 million visitors every year who come to learn and pay their respects.

Pearl Harbor Memorial

Have you hard of the Dropping of the Roses Ceremony at the Statue of Liberty? Each year for the past twenty years, roses are dropped at the based of the statue to commemorate those who lost their lives in the attack. It’s a somber ceremony that takes place at the moment of the attack and it’s a lovely way to remember those who gave their lives.

Roses from the Dropping of the Roses Ceremony at the Statue of Liberty

If you find yourself on the gorgeous beaches of Hawaii this week, and especially on Oahu, take a moment to think about the event of 69 years ago and the impact it had on our country.

Photos: An honorable German, Chadica, NYCMarines