TY - JOUR
T1 - The social and cultural meanings of infertility for men and women in Zambia: legacy, family and divine intervention
AU - Howe, Sydney
AU - Gerrits, T
AU - Zulu, JM
AU - Boivin, J
N1 - No DOI
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Despite the high prevalence of infertility within the sub-Saharan sterility belt, infertility in Zambia is understudied,
particularly from a social perspective. Furthermore, few studies in sub-Saharan Africa include the infertility
experiences of men. This article seeks to fill this gap by qualitatively describing the ways in which infertility in
Zambia is socially and culturally loaded for both men and women. Demonstrating fertility is necessary to be
considered a full adult, a real man or woman, and to leave a legacy after death. People in Zambia, including
medical professionals, currently lack the necessary information and access to (or ability to provide) care to
effectively resolve fertility issues. Infertile people manage their experience through a variety of social, emotional,
spiritual, and medical strategies. However, no solution is considered adequate unless the intervention results in
childbirth. In this way, infertility is about producing babies and the social meaning of that process, rather than
the raising of children.
AB - Despite the high prevalence of infertility within the sub-Saharan sterility belt, infertility in Zambia is understudied,
particularly from a social perspective. Furthermore, few studies in sub-Saharan Africa include the infertility
experiences of men. This article seeks to fill this gap by qualitatively describing the ways in which infertility in
Zambia is socially and culturally loaded for both men and women. Demonstrating fertility is necessary to be
considered a full adult, a real man or woman, and to leave a legacy after death. People in Zambia, including
medical professionals, currently lack the necessary information and access to (or ability to provide) care to
effectively resolve fertility issues. Infertile people manage their experience through a variety of social, emotional,
spiritual, and medical strategies. However, no solution is considered adequate unless the intervention results in
childbirth. In this way, infertility is about producing babies and the social meaning of that process, rather than
the raising of children.
UR - https://fvvo.be/archive/volume-12/number-3/original-articles/the-social-and-cultural-meanings-of-infertility-for-men-and-women-in-zambia-legacy-family-and-divine/
M3 - Article
SN - 2032-0418
VL - 12
JO - Facts, views & vision in ObGyn
JF - Facts, views & vision in ObGyn
IS - 3
ER -