'It is our everyday life' : a Swiss interview-based study on care professionals’ experiences in assisting older patients to conceive with medically assisted reproduction
- Author
- Andrea Martani, Nathalie Bettina Neeser, Kato Verghote (UGent) , Christian de Geyter and Tenzin Wangmo
- Organization
- Abstract
- Background : Medically assisted reproduction (MAR) has expanded the chances people have to reproduce, but it has also raised a number of ethical issues on how to use these technologies. One of the most relevant doubts concerns the possibility of granting access to MAR to older aspiring parents, considering that an increasing number of people have children at an advance parental age (APA). This generates not only abstract theoretical questions, but also concrete challenges and moral doubts for care professionals in their daily work. Methods : To investigate these issues, we conducted a qualitative exploratory study. After developing a semi-structured interview guide, we recruited and interviewed 15 care professionals in Switzerland working with older patients trying to conceive with MAR. Results : Through applied thematic analysis and collaborative auditing, we identified relevant themes in our data. First, our participants emphasised that they often work with older patients, who are part of the everyday work for MAR professionals. We then showed that professionals perceive older patients as particularly ‘on edge’ and thus have to adjust their work accordingly. Third we investigated the specificities that interacting with older patients during MAR treatment entail, including the need to be realistic about chances but also empathetic about emotional investment. Finally, we identified the struggles of professionals in assessing their patients as potential future parents. Conclusions : Our results show that professionals often perceive older patients as unaware of their advanced reproductive age, thus raising the question whether public health campaigns should better convey this message. It is also important to reflect on the struggles that professionals face in breaking bad news and balancing the desire to help older patients without fuelling false hopes. This shows the need of more widespread discussion and guidance on how to best provide care to this growing group of patients.
- Keywords
- Reproductive techniques, Ethics, Advanced parental age, Fertility policy, Qualitative interviews, Reproduktionsverfahren, Ethik, Fortgeschrittenes Alter der Eltern, Fruchtbarkeitspolitik, Qualitative Interviews, ESHRE TASK-FORCE, AGE, PREGNANCY, ETHICS, WOMEN, OUTCOMES
Downloads
-
publisher version.pdf
- full text (Published version)
- |
- open access
- |
- |
- 503.91 KB
Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-01JWZW8WZJCXGZ2461QQAN1CT3
- MLA
- Martani, Andrea, et al. “‘It Is Our Everyday Life’ : A Swiss Interview-Based Study on Care Professionals’ Experiences in Assisting Older Patients to Conceive with Medically Assisted Reproduction.” ETHIK IN DER MEDIZIN, vol. 37, no. 2, 2025, pp. 135–57, doi:10.1007/s00481-025-00864-7.
- APA
- Martani, A., Neeser, N. B., Verghote, K., de Geyter, C., & Wangmo, T. (2025). “It is our everyday life’ : a Swiss interview-based study on care professionals” experiences in assisting older patients to conceive with medically assisted reproduction. ETHIK IN DER MEDIZIN, 37(2), 135–157. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00481-025-00864-7
- Chicago author-date
- Martani, Andrea, Nathalie Bettina Neeser, Kato Verghote, Christian de Geyter, and Tenzin Wangmo. 2025. “‘It Is Our Everyday Life’ : A Swiss Interview-Based Study on Care Professionals’ Experiences in Assisting Older Patients to Conceive with Medically Assisted Reproduction.” ETHIK IN DER MEDIZIN 37 (2): 135–57. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00481-025-00864-7.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Martani, Andrea, Nathalie Bettina Neeser, Kato Verghote, Christian de Geyter, and Tenzin Wangmo. 2025. “‘It Is Our Everyday Life’ : A Swiss Interview-Based Study on Care Professionals’ Experiences in Assisting Older Patients to Conceive with Medically Assisted Reproduction.” ETHIK IN DER MEDIZIN 37 (2): 135–157. doi:10.1007/s00481-025-00864-7.
- Vancouver
- 1.Martani A, Neeser NB, Verghote K, de Geyter C, Wangmo T. “It is our everyday life’ : a Swiss interview-based study on care professionals” experiences in assisting older patients to conceive with medically assisted reproduction. ETHIK IN DER MEDIZIN. 2025;37(2):135–57.
- IEEE
- [1]A. Martani, N. B. Neeser, K. Verghote, C. de Geyter, and T. Wangmo, “‘It is our everyday life’ : a Swiss interview-based study on care professionals’ experiences in assisting older patients to conceive with medically assisted reproduction,” ETHIK IN DER MEDIZIN, vol. 37, no. 2, pp. 135–157, 2025.
@article{01JWZW8WZJCXGZ2461QQAN1CT3,
abstract = {{Background : Medically assisted reproduction (MAR) has expanded the chances people have to reproduce, but it has also raised a number of ethical issues on how to use these technologies. One of the most relevant doubts concerns the possibility of granting access to MAR to older aspiring parents, considering that an increasing number of people have children at an advance parental age (APA). This generates not only abstract theoretical questions, but also concrete challenges and moral doubts for care professionals in their daily work.
Methods : To investigate these issues, we conducted a qualitative exploratory study. After developing a semi-structured interview guide, we recruited and interviewed 15 care professionals in Switzerland working with older patients trying to conceive with MAR.
Results : Through applied thematic analysis and collaborative auditing, we identified relevant themes in our data. First, our participants emphasised that they often work with older patients, who are part of the everyday work for MAR professionals. We then showed that professionals perceive older patients as particularly ‘on edge’ and thus have to adjust their work accordingly. Third we investigated the specificities that interacting with older patients during MAR treatment entail, including the need to be realistic about chances but also empathetic about emotional investment. Finally, we identified the struggles of professionals in assessing their patients as potential future parents.
Conclusions : Our results show that professionals often perceive older patients as unaware of their advanced reproductive age, thus raising the question whether public health campaigns should better convey this message. It is also important to reflect on the struggles that professionals face in breaking bad news and balancing the desire to help older patients without fuelling false hopes. This shows the need of more widespread discussion and guidance on how to best provide care to this growing group of patients.}},
author = {{Martani, Andrea and Neeser, Nathalie Bettina and Verghote, Kato and de Geyter, Christian and Wangmo, Tenzin}},
issn = {{0935-7335}},
journal = {{ETHIK IN DER MEDIZIN}},
keywords = {{Reproductive techniques,Ethics,Advanced parental age,Fertility policy,Qualitative interviews,Reproduktionsverfahren,Ethik,Fortgeschrittenes Alter der Eltern,Fruchtbarkeitspolitik,Qualitative Interviews,ESHRE TASK-FORCE,AGE,PREGNANCY,ETHICS,WOMEN,OUTCOMES}},
language = {{eng}},
number = {{2}},
pages = {{135--157}},
title = {{'It is our everyday life' : a Swiss interview-based study on care professionals’ experiences in assisting older patients to conceive with medically assisted reproduction}},
url = {{http://doi.org/10.1007/s00481-025-00864-7}},
volume = {{37}},
year = {{2025}},
}
- Altmetric
- View in Altmetric
- Web of Science
- Times cited: