Award-winning urologist - and pioneer in Men’s Health - Dr. Paul Turek blogs weekly about issues such as infertility, vasectomy and vasectomy reversal, sexual and hormonal dysfunction and more. Keep up with latest in this fascinating field of medicine.

One Child China

China: 5000 years old and on the move.

China: 5000 years old and on the move.

Just got back from China, from Beijing and Hong Kong to be exact. I lectured to several medical and academic institutions on where I believe men’s health is headed in the future. What I found was an audience eager to push the research frontiers in this field, however I also a sensed a lack of sufficient infrastructure to do this at the highest level. I paused for a moment to think about what was possible, since a monumental tidal wave of increased industrial productivity and change is occurring in China. For example, there are 1000 new cars being put on the road daily in Beijing alone! I sensed that when the might of China’s intellectual potential directs its energy toward medical research and innovation, the world will stand in utter awe at the prodigious output that will result.

Despite the fact that China’s culture is endowed with 5000 years of evolution and is responsible for helping to define human civilization, one thing really surprised me: its decision in 1979 to control its population by mandating a “One Child Only” policy. In the rest of the world, human reproduction is a basic right and for the most part, entirely unregulated. Under China law, families are allowed to have one child. After that, a vasectomy is performed on the male partner. Like it or not.

In addition to great control of population growth, the “One Child Only” policy has also led to the development of the wildly successful “No Scalpel Vasectomy” procedure. Now relatively common in the U.S., the “No Scalpel Vasectomy” is a quicker (10 minute), cleaner, less invasive and more comfortable innovation on a 100-year old American procedure.

But the curse of the “No Scalpel Vasectomy” is now being felt in China. Currently, it is difficult to find enough youth to fill jobs in urban areas within the massive and burgeoning Chinese economy. As a consequence, there has been a softening of the law such that couples that are both products of “one child” parents can now have two children. So can farmers, handicapped couples, and couples who work in “high risk” occupations like coal mining, heavy equipment operations and the like.

Even more fascinating is that infertile couples have a real reproductive edge over fertile couples under this law. How? Well, if they need assisted reproduction to help them conceive and they happen to have twins or triplets as a result (a 30-40% chance), they are not penalized for bearing “extra” children. Can’t help but think that this little known fact may partly contribute to the size of the massive, bustling IVF clinics that I visited in China last week. many of which are 4-10 times the size of U.S. clinics.

Related posts:

  1. Adding Hope to Health
  2. Are We Replacing Ourselves?
  3. Handling The Truth
  4. The Vasectomy Hoopla
  5. The Ailing Male Pill
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About Dr. Turek

A founder of the male fertility and male sexual healthcare movement, Dr. Paul Turek is also an internationally recognized master microsurgeon who specializes in vasectomy and vasectomy reversal, FNA testicular mapping, sperm retrieval and male erectile and sexual dysfunction.

He is a former Academy of Medical Educators Endowed Chair Professor of Urology, Obstetrics & Gynecology at UCSF and while there, directed a National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant for training new leaders in men's reproductive health. He has authored more than 175 publications on genetic, urological and epidemiological issues in men's reproductive health and regularly consults for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the NIH and other branches of the US government and industry on matters relating to men's reproductive health. He currently holds an NIH grant to create a human artificial testicle to make sperm.

He is Past-President of the American Society of Andrology, a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons, the Société Internationale d'Urologie and the Royal Society of Medicine (London). Dr Turek is also Editor of the Reproductive Volume of Netter's Images, 2nd Edition. His hobbies include vintage cars and long board surfing.

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