Abstract

Time-lapse imaging has recently been introduced in fertility treatment and represents a controversial, yet potentially revolutionary tool for IVF practice. Time-lapse technologies take pictures of embryos at regular intervals (every 5, 10, or 20 min) and produce a large amount of images for each embryo. This data, in conjunction with computer algorithms, is meant to help professionals pick the best embryo to be implanted. Embryo selection is essential in IVF practice for increasing pregnancy rates and reducing the negative effect of repeated failures. Nonetheless, a significant number of clinics charge additional fees for this new, yet clinically unproven technology. Stemming from a larger research project that investigate the case of time-lapse monitoring, this paper’s objective is to analyse the emergence of a new medical technology, focusing on its reception by professionals and the public alike. Our research asks: How is time-lapse technology currently integrated in clinical practice? How is it advertised to patients? How is it perceived outside professional circles? Using ethnographic data collected from 5 UK clinical sites (observations in IVF labs and interviews with professionals) and document analysis (medical literature, manufacturers’ and clinics’ websites, public documents produced by stakeholders), we argue that the case of time-lapse reveals several shortcomings in the development and uptake of new technologies in IVF practice. More specifically, we critically explore three inter-related areas that have influenced time-lapse use in UK clinics: patient expectations, IVF marketing and technology trends, and IVF professionals’ integration of technological innovation in medical practice. We conclude that the development, use and marketing of new medical technologies must be sensitive to the perpetuation of inequities in health access. The use and cost associated with time-lapse technology is important in shaping inequalities of access to health care „services in the global fertility market.

Highlights

  • Themes of surveillance and control in the context of weight loss surgery are well established in existing critical literature, usually contrasted with joy and pleasure

  • Researchers have recently disrupted this dichotomy and showed how some clinicians use more empathic, enjoyable methods of weight loss. This research continues this disruption and states that bariatric dietitians offer different perspectives on food behavior and of the body than those of popular biomedical approaches. While this ‘anti-diet’ discourse is not limited to bariatrics, I argue that for bariatric patients this new discourse is liberating in many ways

  • This paper is based on interviews with 5 bariatric dietitians and on participant observation in a weight loss clinic: I joined 55 dietitian-patient consultation sessions and 20 meetings of a bariatric support group, guided by a dietitian and a psychotherapist

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Summary

Background

Themes of surveillance and control in the context of weight loss (bariatric) surgery are well established in existing critical literature, usually contrasted with joy and pleasure. Researchers have recently disrupted this dichotomy and showed how some clinicians use more empathic, enjoyable methods of weight loss. This research continues this disruption and states that bariatric dietitians offer different perspectives on food behavior and of the body than those of popular biomedical approaches. While this ‘anti-diet’ discourse is not limited to bariatrics, I argue that for bariatric patients this new discourse is liberating in many ways

Methods
ISSUES AND IMPROVING WELLBEING
INTEGRATING NEW BIOMEDICAL TECHNOLOGIES

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