Research summary
This project aims to raise awareness of the workplace issues around complex fertility journeys, which can include infertility, fertility treatment, miscarriage and childlessness.
These journeys can include several rounds of fertility treatment, with each being demanding physically, psychologically, socially and potentially financially.
These experiences are commonplace for workers around the world.
The World Health Organization estimates that worldwide 15% of all reproductive-age couples experience issues with infertility - an age that coincides with a key time in people’s working lives.
There are also specific fertility challenges for same-sex couples and women pursuing motherhood alone.
When it comes to the interaction between work and family, academic research and organisational support has tended to focus upon experiences after the point of conception, such as pregnancy and childbirth, whereas pre-conception fertility remains a largely invisible workplace issue.
Our research seeks to fill this gap in knowledge to help organisations better support employees through challenging journeys.
We explore how fertility journeys play out in a range of work contexts, and focus on a range of issues including:
Data collection methods include personal history interviewing and a review of online materials.
We have interviewed over 80 individuals who have experience navigating complex fertility journeys alongside employment - with participant diversity of gender, relationship status, sexual orientation and industry, job role and contract type.
We have also interviewed line managers to explore their confidence, capability and perceived autonomy when it comes to providing support to employees, as well as a number of fertility counsellors.
A key output will be an ethnodrama about complex fertility journeys and the workplace - a dramatisation of the key issues raised that we will develop from the research data. This will be shown to various audiences including human resources professionals and people managers, reproductive science students and the general public.
We are also working with:
- the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD) on guidance on fertility treatment and pregnancy loss
- A number of organisations comprising the ‘Workplace Fertility Campaign Group’, including Fertility Network UK and Fertility Matters at Work.
- Tommy’s charity on their Pregnancy and Parenting at Work resource
As a sample of the ethnodrama output, we include two short audio clips below. These are fictionalised vignettes derived from research data, and may be of interest to those on complex fertility journeys, people managers, and those with a general interest in learning more about the possible issues.
The HR Meeting sets out some of the issues around disclosing fertility treatment and miscarriage in the workplace, manager handling of disclosure, and issues around HR policy. It is not intended to be a ‘how to conduct such a meeting’ guide, but rather a prompt for discussion.
Man Up is a monologue from the male/partner perspective. Another of the ethnodrama audio clips, addressing the issue of involuntary childlessness as one outcome of a fertility journey, has been featured on the World Childless Week 2022 website.