Should we panic over declining sperm counts? Harvard researchers say not so fast 我們是否應該對精子數量下降感到恐慌?

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News Release 10-May-2021

Editor’s note: To those who do not have a desire to have children, sperm count does not matter. For everyone one else, men and women alike should be worried about. The decline on sperm count is largely associated with environmental pollutants including radiation, ionizing and non-ionizing radiation such as x-ray and electronic-magnetic fields, cell phone radiation, certain medications, stress and depression, endocrine disruptors, and many other toxic chemicals.

編者註:對於那些不希望生育孩子的人來說,精子數量並不重要。 對於其他每個人,男人和女人都應該擔心。 精子數量減少主要與環境污染物有關,這些污染物包括輻射,X射線和電磁場的電離和非電離輻射,手機輻射,某些藥物,壓力和抑鬱,內分泌干擾物和許多其他有毒化學物質 。

An alternative explanation of recent findings of declining sperm counts: normal, non-pathological variation

Harvard University

Research News

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IMAGE: A new study from the Harvard GenderSci Lab in the journal Human Fertility, “The Future of Sperm: A Biovariability Framework for Understanding Global Sperm Count Trends ” questions the panic over… view more  Credit: Harvard GenderSci Lab

A new study from the Harvard GenderSci Lab in the journal Human Fertility, “The Future of Sperm: A Biovariability Framework for Understanding Global Sperm Count Trends” questions the panic over apparent trends of declining human sperm count.

Recent studies have claimed that sperm counts among men globally, and especially from “Western” countries, are in decline, leading to apocalyptic claims about the possible extinction of the human species.

But the Harvard paper, by Marion Boulicault, Sarah S. Richardson, and colleagues, reanalyzes claims of precipitous human sperm declines, re-evaluating evidence presented in the widely-cited 2017 meta-analysis by Hagai Levine, Shanna Swan, and colleagues.

Richardson: “The extraordinary biological claims of the meta-analysis of sperm count trends and the public attention it continues to garner raised questions for the GenderSci Lab, which specializes in analyzing bias and hype in the sciences of sex, gender, and reproduction and in the intersectional study of race, gender, and science.”

Boulicault et al. propose an alternative explanation of sperm count trends in human populations: That sperm count varies within a wide range, much of which can be considered non-pathological and species-typical, and that above a critical threshold, more is not necessarily an indicator of better health or higher probability of fertility relative to less. The authors term this the Sperm Count Biovariability hypothesis.

The paper argues that a biovariability framework better supports critically important research on factors affecting the reproductive health of all men. Lead author Boulicault: “By proposing an alternative approach to sperm count data, we aim to contribute to the burgeoning discussion among reproductive health scientists and other researchers and clinicians about men’s health.”

Among the reasons to consider alternative interpretations of sperm count patterns than that of precipitous and fertility-threatening declines in men’s sperm counts is the life of such theories in Alt-Right, white supremacist, and men’s rights discourse. These groups have used Levine and Swan’s research to argue that the fertility and health of men in whiter nations are in imminent danger, often linking the danger to the perceived increase in ethnic and racial diversity and to the influence of feminist and anti-racist social movements.

The Harvard researchers argue that claims of recent and impending dramatic declines in human sperm counts are based on a number of scientifically and ethically problematic assumptions:

As the paper concludes, “Researchers must take care to weigh hypotheses against alternatives and consider the language and narrative frames in which they present their work. In addition to its explanatory virtues, we argue that biovariability offers a more promising framework than does “sperm decline” for attending to these imperatives.”

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