What the study found
Donor conception is becoming more complex, and the paper maps psychosocial support and counselling provisions across ten Western countries. The authors identify key challenges in existing donor-conception provisions and support systems and propose improvements for donor-conceived people, donors, parents, siblings, and their families.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors say the growing complexity of donor conception can create challenges for donor-conceived people, parents, donors, and their families. They suggest that more accessible and responsive psycho-social support services are needed, especially given disclosure, long-term psychosocial wellbeing, and donor-linking.
What the researchers tested
The study mapped the donor-conception context in ten Western countries, including the availability of psychosocial support and counselling. It gave particular attention to post-donation counselling support related to disclosure, long-term psychosocial wellbeing, and donor-linking.
What worked and what didn't
The abstract states that direct-to-consumer DNA testing can reveal donor conception where it has not been disclosed and can connect genetically related people earlier than identity-release provisions in many jurisdictions. It also notes that early contact between donors and recipient parents, and between same-donor siblings, is becoming more common, while large sibling groups, imported gametes, and online donor recruitment add complexity.
What to keep in mind
The abstract does not describe the specific provisions in each of the ten countries or give detailed comparative results. It also does not provide detailed data on outcomes, and limitations are not otherwise described in the available summary.
Key points
- The paper maps donor-conception psychosocial support and counselling across ten Western countries.
- The authors identify challenges in existing donor-conception provisions and support systems.
- Direct-to-consumer DNA testing can reveal donor conception and connect genetically related people earlier than some identity-release rules allow.
- The abstract notes growing complexity from early contact, large sibling groups, imported gametes, and online donor recruitment.
- The authors suggest more accessible and responsive psycho-social support services are needed.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Support provisions for donor conception vary across ten countries
- Authors:
- Sonja Goedeke, Astrid Indekeu, Marilyn Crawshaw
- Institutions:
- Auckland University of Technology, KU Leuven, University of York
- Publication date:
- 2026-02-01
- OpenAlex record:
- View
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