‘Once you open that Pandora’s Box, you cannot close it’: a qualitative study on family relationships following insemination fraud

Reproductive BioMedicine Online (2023)
Published on April 20, 2023

Authors: Sabrina Zeghiche, Isabel Côté, & Kévin Lavoie

First published: April 2023

Research question: Insemination fraud occurs when the spermatozoa intended for insemination have been intentionally swapped for another person’s without the knowledge of the intended family. In what ways is this experienced by recipient parents and their offspring?

Results: This study documents how insemination fraud is experienced by recipient parents and (their) offspring at the personal and relational levels. At the personal level, insemination fraud can induce a sense of agency loss for the recipient parents and a (temporary) sense of identity realignment for the offspring. At the relational level, it can lead to a reshuffling of genetic ties through the new genetic mapping it involves. This reshuffling can, in turn, disrupt kinship ties, leaving a deep imprint that some families struggle to overcome. Experiences differ depending on whether or not the progenitor is known, and when he is known, on whether it is another donor or the doctor himself.

Conclusions: Given the significant challenges that insemination fraud poses to the families who experience it, it is important that this practice be subjected to the medical, legal and social scrutiny it deserves.

How to cite this publication

Zeghiche, S., Côté, I., & Lavoie, K. (2023). ‘Once you open that Pandora’s Box, you cannot close it’: a qualitative study on family relationships following insemination fraud. Reproductive BioMedicine Online, 47(2), 103220.

  • Sabrina Zeghiche

    Professor in the department of social work at Université du Québec en Outaouais
  • Isabel Côté

    Professor in the department of social work at Université du Québec en Outaouais
  • Kévin Lavoie

    Assistant professor in Université Laval’s school of social work and criminology and is the scientific director of the Centre de recherche Jeunes, familles et réponses sociales

Project

  • Drifts in Donor Conception and Their Impacts on Life Trajectories

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