Friday, March 28, 2025

 

New study explores what motivates LGB parents to have more children




Reichman University
Dr. Geva Shenkman Lachberg, Dina Recanati School of Medicine: 

image: 

Dr. Geva Shenkman Lachberg, Dina Recanati School of Medicine:

view more 

Credit: Gilad Kavalerchick





“Neither stigma nor social support — but rather age, economic status, number of children, and religiosity — are the key predictors of LGB parents’ desire to expand their families.” A new study led by Dr. Geva Shenkman-Lachberg of the Dina Recanati School of Medicine at Reichman University, in collaboration with Yuval Shaia of Reichman University and Dr. Kfir Ifrah of Ruppin Academic Center, found that only sociodemographic factors — including the parent’s age, number of current children, economic status, and level of religiosity — predict the desire and intention to have more children among lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) parents. In contrast to the findings of previous studies, experiences of discrimination, stigma, and social support were not found to have a significant impact on parental aspirations. The researchers now aim to further explore the reasons behind these findings.

 

The research team explored the desire, intention, and assessment of the likelihood of having additional children among LGB individuals who are already parents. The study, published last week in the Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology, is the first to focus on the motivations for family expansion among LGB parents. It examined three measures of parental aspirations — desire, intention, and estimated probability — in the context of parenthood achieved through fertility treatments.

 

The study included 234 LGB parents with an average age of 40.23, surveyed between November 2022 and February 2024. Participants completed questionnaires addressing a wide range of factors that may influence the motivation to have additional children. The variables examined included sociodemographic characteristics (parent’s age, gender, education level, economic status, religiosity, marital status, number of children, and place of residence); factors related to perceptions of the parental role (investment in parenting, satisfaction with parenting, sense of parental competence, and parental integration); social variables (social support, experiences of discrimination, and stigma); as well as a cultural variable — pronatalism, which reflects sociocultural values ​​that encourage childbirth and parenthood.

 

As one of the first studies to examine motivations for having additional children among LGB parents, the researchers based their hypotheses on previous findings from studies conducted among LGB individuals who were not yet parents. These earlier studies found that, alongside sociodemographic variables, social factors also had a significant impact. For example, non-parent LGB individuals who experienced lower levels of social support and higher levels of stigma and discrimination reported lower desire and intention to become parents. Accordingly, the researchers hypothesized that similar patterns would emerge among LGB parents — that exposure to stigma and discrimination or a lack of social support would be associated with decreased motivation to expand their families.

 

However, contrary to the initial hypothesis and previous findings from studies of non-parent LGB individuals, the current study found that only sociodemographic factors were significant predictors of motivation for additional children. Younger parental age, fewer existing children, higher economic status, and greater religiosity were the only variables found to be associated with the desire, intention, and estimated likelihood of bringing additional children into the world. In contrast, social support, stigma, discrimination, perceptions of the parental role, and pronatalist attitudes were not found to be significantly linked with aspirations for family expansion, once sociodemographic variables were accounted for within the statistical prediction model.

 

Dr. Geva Shenkman Lachberg, Dina Recanati School of Medicine: “The current study is particularly relevant in the Israeli context — a country that reveres childbirth and parenthood, with one of the highest average numbers of children among OECD countries. Israel is also known for its widespread use of assisted reproductive technologies and generous government funding, including nearly unlimited cycles of fertility treatment. Within this ‘parenting empire’, it is important to understand what motivates LGB parents to have more children — especially given the significant challenges they have faced over the years, such as restrictions on surrogacy in Israel.

 

“While previous studies have highlighted the impact of stigma, discrimination, and lack of social support on parenthood aspirations among sexual minorities, it seems that these factors carry less weight among LGB parents. It may be that after they have succeeded in becoming parents — effectively breaking the glass ceiling — they are accepted into the social consensus, and it is the sociodemographic factors that remain significant. In this sense, the emerging picture closely resembles the one we are familiar with among heterosexual parents.”

 

This study, one of the first to address the motivations for having additional children among LGB parents who have used assisted reproductive technologies, makes a significant contribution to understanding gay parenthood in the Israeli context.

 

 

No comments: