In this article we explore the recent enactment of evidence-based medicine (EBM) in the field of fertility care. We aim to contribute to the medical sociology literature through an analysis of how evidence is produced, interpreted and institutionalised in a relatively new medical field such as in vitro fertilisation (IVF), characterised by high uncertainty due to limited knowledge and high levels of commercialisation. Drawing on extensive ethnographic research conducted in England, this article explores the challenges IVF professionals encounter in producing credible data on the effectiveness of additional treatments, offering novel insights on the tensions between commercialisation and standardisation in the enactment of EBM. Extant medica...
In the past decade we have seen almost universal acceptance of the concepts encompassed by the words...
This paper is about patients’ accounts of the processes through which a medical diagnosis of inferti...
The notion of ‘evidence’ circulates in two realms of current maternity care: biomedical ‘evidence-ba...
Social scientists have long been interested in the forces and values driving healthcare innovation. ...
With the increasing offer of fertility treatment by a largely privatised sector, which has involved ...
Focusing on the case of time-lapse imaging (TLI), this paper analyses how medical professionals nego...
Social scientists have long been interested in the forces and values driving healthcare innovation. ...
Focusing on the case of time-lapse imaging (TLI), this paper analyses how medical professionals nego...
Economic incentives in the context of a particular type of market failure—asymmetric information (wh...
The year 2018 marked 40 years since the birth of Louise Brown, the first baby born as a result of pi...
This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.Peer reviewedPostprin
In assisted reproduction, there is strong evidence for some things done, but no or only very weak ev...
RESEARCH QUESTION: What are the views of the medical directors of fertility clinics on IVF add-ons? ...
Globally, procreation is highly valued, and motherhood has long been seen as the normative role for ...
In the past decade we have seen almost universal acceptance of the concepts encompassed by the words...
This paper is about patients’ accounts of the processes through which a medical diagnosis of inferti...
The notion of ‘evidence’ circulates in two realms of current maternity care: biomedical ‘evidence-ba...
Social scientists have long been interested in the forces and values driving healthcare innovation. ...
With the increasing offer of fertility treatment by a largely privatised sector, which has involved ...
Focusing on the case of time-lapse imaging (TLI), this paper analyses how medical professionals nego...
Social scientists have long been interested in the forces and values driving healthcare innovation. ...
Focusing on the case of time-lapse imaging (TLI), this paper analyses how medical professionals nego...
Economic incentives in the context of a particular type of market failure—asymmetric information (wh...
The year 2018 marked 40 years since the birth of Louise Brown, the first baby born as a result of pi...
This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.Peer reviewedPostprin
In assisted reproduction, there is strong evidence for some things done, but no or only very weak ev...
RESEARCH QUESTION: What are the views of the medical directors of fertility clinics on IVF add-ons? ...
Globally, procreation is highly valued, and motherhood has long been seen as the normative role for ...
In the past decade we have seen almost universal acceptance of the concepts encompassed by the words...
This paper is about patients’ accounts of the processes through which a medical diagnosis of inferti...
The notion of ‘evidence’ circulates in two realms of current maternity care: biomedical ‘evidence-ba...