Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3970264 | Reproductive BioMedicine Online | 2013 | 4 Pages |
This commentary presents a response to ‘Cassandra’s prophecy’ from the perspective of a final-year medical student, in an attempt to gauge the particular relevance of age-related fertility decline to female doctors. Women in the UK are increasingly trying to have children at an older age, with a resultant rise in the incidence of age-related fertility decline and obstetric problems. The literature suggests that the trend towards older motherhood is seen particularly among highly educated women, but that such women lack sufficient knowledge about how fertility and obstetric outcomes decline with age. Recent data indicate that female doctors have children significantly later than women in the general population, but are overall no more likely to remain childless. However, there is significant variation between different specialties; for instance, female surgeons have children significantly later and are more likely to be childless by age 35, as compared with both male surgeons and female doctors in other specialties. This commentary explores various explanations for and implications of these data, in the context of recent changes in NHS workforce gender demographics.