Family - Lecture 06 - 2023
Family - Lecture 06 - 2023
Family - Lecture 06 - 2023
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Notice
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L05 Review
• Examine how the promotion of birth control
(especially artificial birth control) allowed
national leaders to drastically limit family size in
the 20th century
• Explore the strategies and contents of mass
media campaigns for family planning in Hong
Kong, mainland China, Singapore and India
• In view of the possible intentions of the mass
media campaigns, discuss what roles national
leaders and elites should play in family planning
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Around the world, losing a child to sickness and
accidents is more common than perceived
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Around 11 million children
under the age of five die
annually in the world as a
whole
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Sub-Saharan Africa is the
region most affected and
accounts for more than
33% of deaths of children
under the age of five (Hill et
al., Trends in Child Mortality
in the Developing World:
1960-1996)
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Around 67% of the child deaths in the developing world are caused by
diseases (predominantly acute respiratory infections, diarrhoea, and malaria)
for which low-cost interventions, including immunization and antibiotics, exist
(Jones et al., How Many Child Deaths Can We Prevent This Year)
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01: Grieving losses
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01: Grieving losses
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At least in the developed world, no parent is
prepared for a child’s death. Most parents do
not expect themselves to outlive their children
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Why does loss matter to a
family?
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Inspired by the Pregnancy &
Infant Loss Remembrance Day
in the US, a group of British
parents inaugurated their own
Baby Loss Awareness Day in
the UK in 2002
https://babyloss-awareness.org
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Several British
fathers narrated how
they grieved their
children differently
from their wives
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A growing number of burial options for
miscarried babies in Hong Kong has
provided greater relief to parents still
mourning the loss of their children
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02: Coping with Infertility
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Infertility 不育 is a problem facing 1 in 6
couples worldwide
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As more individuals tend to delay marriage and
childbirth, infertility has become prevalent,
affecting romantic relationships and family
dynamics
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Today, infertile couples are
encouraged to receive
treatments including different
types of assisted reproductive
technology (ART)
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ART could be a double-edged sword in terms of
alleviating stress in infertility
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In ‘The Trying Game’, Amy Klein
taps into the emotional aspects of
the infertility journey and advises
readers on various fertility
treatments from medical experts
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Patricia Tan, a highly
successful professional
woman from
Singapore, recounts
the pain of her 5-year
IVF journey
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How do commercials depict emotions associated with infertility?
What do they tell us about family as an institution?
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03: Is assisted reproductive technology (e.g. IVF) a right?
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“IVF is just another side of the reproductive choice
coin. You think about abortion as being a woman’s
right to choose ‘no.’ IVF is their right to choose
‘yes.’”
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As American birth controller
Margaret Sanger noted, ‘No
woman can call herself free
until she can choose
consciously whether she will
or will not be a mother.’
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In some regions, IVF is
considered an essential
medical treatment and funded
by the state
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Under the three-child policy, the PRC government will offer
couples free fertility treatment under the public medical
insurance scheme
The insurance fund will cover ART to ease the financial burden
of infertility treatment on families, which can cost several
thousand yuan
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On June 24, 2022, the US
Supreme Court overturned
the 1973 Roe v. Wade case
that provided a constitutional
right for people to terminate
a pregnancy
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IVF is a procedure that involves fertilizing a human
egg outside of the uterus. IVF involves storage and
disposition of embryos
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Rethinking
reproductive health
Is family a right?
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Outcomes
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Debate
Is IVF a right?
Is family a right?
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