Periodic Reporting for period 1 - BIOSFER (Untangling the biologic and social causes of low fertility in modern societies)
Período documentado: 2023-03-01 hasta 2024-08-31
We aim to untangle the drivers of today’s low and polarized fertility. Our overarching goal is to generate deeper knowledge of reproductive health and behaviour that advances scientific understanding of low fertility and is beneficial for individuals’ family planning and political resource allocation. We will characterize in unprecedented detail the present fecundity and fertility aspirations in young adults using innovative biological measures and socio-demographic data (Research Arm (RA) Present). We look into the past to early life, prenatal, and intergenerational influences to examine their potential effect on present fecundity and fertility, using stored samples, existing data, and linked registers (RA Past). We look forward to the future by following the young adults through their 20s and examining the joint role of socio-demographic circumstances and fecundity in shaping childbearing aspirations and outcomes(RA Future). We ensure synergy by design as we incorporate transdisciplinary perspectives that merge the biological and social in each of the RAs.
Our project brings together complementary yet distinct knowledge, expertise and resources in a new way. It focuses on questions of pressing importance, whose answers will have transformative scientific potential. We test an array of hypotheses that focus on fundamental questions about human reproductive health. The size, scope and duration of MoBa and the DNBC, the bold novel approaches and unique synthesis of ideas and researchers will enable testing these hypotheses in longitudinal settings that are unmatched worldwide. Our ability to study fecundity and fertility prospectively at the levels of individuals, couples and population, and potentially new biomarkers of fecundity for both women and men, will push the frontiers of fertility science. The new knowledge gained will be important for characterizing fecundity and fecundity trajectories and policies. For instance, if we find that social settings are the foremost force that drives reproductive aspirations and outcomes, it is important that resources be channelled towards modifying settings that result in unintended outcomes. If biology largely dominates, it is critical to allocate resources to eliminate offending environmental exposures that affect this biology and devise prevention modalities.
We have also made an effort to bring our three international teams together at three synergy camps, which are meetings of around 50 involved researchers, to encourage collaboration and spark the synergy effects among the interdisciplinary researchers. The scientific work is starting to take up speed with a total of 32 peer-review papers already published, including groundbreaking findings on the social and biological determinants of fertility in modern societies. Some of this work has also been presented at major scientific conferences of the respective fields, making BIOSFER known in the research communities and allowing for critical discussion of the results.
BIOSFER has been featured in several media outlets (TV, newspapers, radio) and is thus gaining increasing attention. This brings us closer to our goal of spreading the new, groundbreaking knowledge on fecundity and fertility in our modern societies to the general public and policy makers alike.