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David Foster's avatar

"“On average, female physicians complete medical training at age 31, and the age when most women doctors first give birth is 32, compared with 27 for nonphysicians, according to a 2021 study.” I've seen it argued that US medical training is longer than it really needs to be, I don't know enough about the field to have a useful opinion on that...but there are a lot of other fields in which the demand for educational credentials and hence for years of schooling is all out of proportion to the true need for and value of those credentials.

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Regan's avatar

Great post and thank you for the plug!

As you said we need a multi-pronged approach which almost certainly includes cultural change and increased status granted to the parents of large families. But also, as you highlight we already know that there's lots of couples who want more kids and are struggling to have them due to oocyte age... so why not start by at least making it easier for those couples to have more babies. Many of the women who wait the longest to have kids are intelligent and ambitious and in good marriages (because they waited to find the right partner) and we definitely want those couples having more kids. And as you say (and as I mentioned in my post as well), convincing those women to have kids in their 20s will be very, very tough without other changes (like the decreased training time for high-status careers that you suggest). I just want to reiterate once more that supporting egg freezing does not imply a lack of support for other fertility increasing policies including those that make it more attractive for young couples to have kids - I got a lot of responses that I think mistakenly assumed these things are zero sum. But I support both things, and agree with you that the marginal babies born as a result of an egg freezing program couldn't easily be shifted to being born to a younger mom.

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