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Practice of in-vitro fertilization: A case study from Finland

In 1978 the first human IVF-baby was born. Today IVF is a standard procedure in the treatment of infertility in industrialized Western countries. In this study we analyzed how IVF reached an established position as a medical innovation in Finland, how IVF-care was organized between 1991–1993, and wh...

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Published in:Social science & medicine (1982) 1996-04, Vol.42 (7), p.975-983
Main Authors: Silverio, Maili Malin, Hemminki, Elina
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description In 1978 the first human IVF-baby was born. Today IVF is a standard procedure in the treatment of infertility in industrialized Western countries. In this study we analyzed how IVF reached an established position as a medical innovation in Finland, how IVF-care was organized between 1991–1993, and which kind of women used IVF-services and delivered a child as a result. The data sources were interviews with practicing IVF-physicians, a survey of Finnish IVF-clinics, telephone interviews with a sample of the adult population, and data of mothers from the Finnish Birth Registry. IVF in Finland followed the four stages of a medical innovation from a promising report into a standard procedure. Key factors in the introduction of IVF-methods were the work of andrologists', and later, IVF-physicians' associations, the approval of the method by head gynecologists in university clinics and among other colleagues, and later, the increase in IVF-services without regulatory government policy. IVF has become increasingly available in private clinics because pioneer physicians have established such services. In principle there was no social discrimination in having IVF, because it was available almost free of charge in public clinics. But the costs and availability of private clinics created unequal access to IVF services. IVF-women were more often upper-class white collar employees living in southern Finland than women in the control group. IVF has been a routine treatment option of infertility since the end of the 1980s. It has provided a medical technology solution to infertility. The supply and demand of IVF has increased and its indications have widened in the treatment of infertility. This is the inner logic of a successful technology: after the developmental processes of a revolutionary innovation, the use of technology escalates rapidly and the barries for its use decrease.
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Today IVF is a standard procedure in the treatment of infertility in industrialized Western countries. In this study we analyzed how IVF reached an established position as a medical innovation in Finland, how IVF-care was organized between 1991–1993, and which kind of women used IVF-services and delivered a child as a result. The data sources were interviews with practicing IVF-physicians, a survey of Finnish IVF-clinics, telephone interviews with a sample of the adult population, and data of mothers from the Finnish Birth Registry. IVF in Finland followed the four stages of a medical innovation from a promising report into a standard procedure. Key factors in the introduction of IVF-methods were the work of andrologists', and later, IVF-physicians' associations, the approval of the method by head gynecologists in university clinics and among other colleagues, and later, the increase in IVF-services without regulatory government policy. IVF has become increasingly available in private clinics because pioneer physicians have established such services. In principle there was no social discrimination in having IVF, because it was available almost free of charge in public clinics. But the costs and availability of private clinics created unequal access to IVF services. IVF-women were more often upper-class white collar employees living in southern Finland than women in the control group. IVF has been a routine treatment option of infertility since the end of the 1980s. It has provided a medical technology solution to infertility. The supply and demand of IVF has increased and its indications have widened in the treatment of infertility. 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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); ScienceDirect Journals; PAIS Index; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Adult
Artificial Insemination
Attitude of Health Personnel
Attitudes
Biological and medical sciences
Birth control
Cross-Cultural Comparison
Cross-Sectional Studies
Delivery Systems
Female
Fertility
Fertilization (in vitro)
Fertilization in Vitro - statistics & numerical data
Finland
Finland - epidemiology
Gynecology. Andrology. Obstetrics
Health care
Health Services
Human reproduction
Humans
implemenation process of IVF
implemenation process of IVF organization of care physicians' attitudes women patients' characteristics
In vitro fertilization
Incidence
Infant, Newborn
Infertility
Infertility - epidemiology
Infertility - etiology
Infertility - therapy
Innovation
Male
Medical sciences
Medical sector
Medical technology
Mothers
organization of care
Patients
Physicians
physicians' attitudes
Pregnancy
Reproduction
Reproductive Technologies
Reproductive technology
Social Attitudes
Social research
Sterility. Assisted procreation
women patients' characteristics
title Practice of in-vitro fertilization: A case study from Finland
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