Well, I don't recall reading about this before, but
here it is in the New York Times. While we have all heard of male sperm counts dropping for unclear reasons around the globe, apparently, male infertility has been recognized as a real problem in the Middle East for decades:
Over
the past 30 years, my research has focused on male infertility in the
Middle East. There, genetic sperm defects — the main cause of male
infertility — are particularly common and often run in families. High
rates of male smoking, ambient air pollution in the major cities and the
stresses of war, too, have taken a costly toll on male reproductive
health. Yet the region not only has made tremendous technological
advances in combating male infertility but also has undergone a dramatic
change in societal attitudes toward the problem.
Back
in the 1980s, as a doctoral student, I headed to Egypt to study
infertility. Semen analysis had become widely available there by the
1970s, and by the time I arrived, ordinary Egyptians — including many a
male cabdriver I spoke with — were aware that men could have “weak”
sperm. Scientific advances had made clear that infertility was not just a
female burden....
Since those early days, much has changed as a result of several factors.
Medical progress, religious permissions and government efforts have
combined to make male infertility treatment much more accessible. But
men themselves have played a major role in lifting taboos, in ways that
are instructive for the West.
The changes began with Islamic clerics, who were among the world’s first
religious leaders to approve in vitro fertilization as a solution to
marital infertility. A permissive fatwa covering IVF issued in Egypt in
1980 allowed the introduction of high-tech assisted reproduction across
the Muslim world. The next decades saw an IVF boom, and today, the
Middle East claims one of the strongest IVF sectors in the world.
This emergence of high-tech reproductive medicine took a leap forward in
the 1990s, with the introduction of a new and particularly effective
form of IVF treatment known as intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI,
pronounced “ik-see”), a breakthrough that gives infertile men a real
chance to become biological fathers. The coming of ICSI to the Middle
East was a technological revolution that in turn led to a social
revolution. As more and more infertile men sought the widely advertised
“ICSI solution,” male infertility was transformed from a masculinity
problem into a medical condition....
As
men like Nabil have come to acknowledge their infertility problems and
seek treatment, they have helped to lighten the heavy load once carried
by their wives: the scrutiny from in-laws, the social ostracism, the
threats of divorce or polygynous remarriage. Indeed, the introduction of
high-tech male infertility treatment and Middle Eastern men’s eager
embrace of this technology have had positive effects on gender relations
across the region.
To
be sure, there are very real and important differences between the
Middle East and the West when it comes to male infertility. In the
Middle East, most infertile couples are barred from using donor sperm to
conceive, despite the religious permissibility of many other treatments
and technologies such as ICSI. In the West, ICSI has long been widely
available, but the cost sometimes makes it inaccessible, particularly in
the United States. But the primary obstacle has come from men’s own
silence on the subject — and here is where the Middle East can serve as
an instructive example.
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