Every Rosh Hashanah, annual reports are released focused on birth rates, the average number of children per family, and other population growth data. However, there’s another side to these statistics: experiences of involuntary childlessness, in which people who wish to be parents are unable to for medical, social, or institutional reasons.
Involuntary childlessness rates compared between Israel and US in international study
Reader’s Picks
-
When humans interact with each other and engage in everyday activities, they typically follow various undefined rules, also known as [...]
-
Research involving Pompeu Fabra University has explored the relationship between having or not having a romantic partner with changes in [...]
-
Women do the majority of “thinking work” in households, regardless of their employment status or how much they earn, new [...]
