1. World problems
  2. Human infertility

Human infertility

  • Barrenness
  • Human sterility
  • Impairments of fertility
  • Inability to conceive

Nature

The inability of many married couples to have children may be due to the husband or the wife, or both, owing to a variety of conditions, among which many may be described under the term infertility. There may be genetic or pathological sterility, or in the case of the male, impotence and related conditions resulting in the inability to naturally introduce sperm into the female. Male sterility is not uncommon. When it is not responsive to treatment, the couple wishing for the wife to conceive may resort to the use of a surrogate father or artificial insemination. Female infertility may be a feature of age, or a sexually transmitted diseases, such as gonorrhoea or chlamydia, which has lead to a blocked fallopian tube.

When the female is infertile, the problem of inducing conception is addressed by a number of remedial approaches ranging from pharmaceutical treatments and microsurgery, to transferring fertilized embryos from one woman to another or from test-tube or in vitro cultivation. There is also the resort to the use of a surrogate mother. Human breeding problems thus give rise to commercial services such as sperm banks, egg banks, surrogates and their agents, and embryo transfer services. Infertility is particularly hard on women, for whom it attaches as a stigma, and may result in their being ostracized, abandoned, or divorced. Stress on the infertile young married female may lead to mental illness and suicide.

Incidence

Infertile couples, unable to have one child or unable to have additional children, number in the tens of millions world-wide. In the USA alone, the number is estimated at 3 million. It is estimated that infertility affects 15 percent of couples of childbearing age, and male infertility is responsible in about half of the cases. Infertility remains one of the major unsolved health care problems. The demand for services due to infertility problems has risen markedly in recent years. Couples spend millions of dollars annually on treatments that may work only in a small percentage of cases.

Counter-claim

Attempts by humans to equalize inequalities in adaptive fitness, often to the point of fertility drugs/clinics, are bizarre. No other species has thrived except by adapting to environmental conditions with inter- and intra-species competition. The human charity impulse combined with our technological skill is currently prompting social justice absurdities.

Broader

Human disability
Presentable

Narrower

Male sterility
Presentable
Childlessness
Presentable
Female sterility
Yet to rate

Aggravates

Underpopulation
Presentable
Human suffering
Presentable

Aggravated by

Prolactinomas
Presentable
Gonorrhoea
Presentable
Cystic fibrosis
Presentable

Reduced by

Related

Strategy

Value

Sterility
Yet to rate
Rights
Yet to rate
Inhumanity
Yet to rate
Infertility
Yet to rate
Fertility
Yet to rate
Barrenness
Yet to rate

Reference

SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #1: No PovertySustainable Development Goal #3: Good Health and Well-being

Metadata

Database
World problems
Type
(C) Cross-sectoral problems
Subject
  • Biosciences » Growth
  • Health care » Handicapped
  • Mankind » Human
  • Content quality
    Presentable
     Presentable
    Language
    English
    Last update
    May 14, 2022