Feasibility of surveillance of changes in human fertility and semen quality

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Abstract

To show that male fertility is declining is not simple. Few men volunteer and recruitment bias may lead to over-representation of the subfertile. Semen analysis has errors arising from counting and poorly standardized criteria, which may be overcome by automation. Time to pregnancy (TTP) - the number of menstrual cycles taken to conceive - measures fertility and allows male recruitment bias to be estimated. We review automated measurement of sperm concentration, motility and morphology and present a preliminary report on a study to assess a retrospective TTP questionnaire, recruitment bias and feasibility for large-scale surveillance of fertility.

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Baker, H. W. G., Garrett, C., Clarke, G. N., Stewart, T. M., Brown, E. H., Venn, A., … Farley, T. M. M. (2000). Feasibility of surveillance of changes in human fertility and semen quality. In International Journal of Andrology, Supplement (Vol. 23, pp. 47–49). Blackwell Publishing Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2605.2000.00014.x

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