Framing reproductive narratives: A thematic discourse analysis of news representations of childlessness in 86 countries (2015–2025)
Sitta Fiakhsani Taqwim, Wenqian Xu, Yi Hyun Kang, Huzeifa Aweesha, Rashmi Rashmi, Paul Joseph Amani, Venosa Mushi, Rockli Kim, Julia Schröders

TL;DR
This study explores how global news media frame childlessness, revealing narratives that influence public perceptions and health equity across diverse regions.
Contribution
The study provides a global, cross-cultural analysis of childlessness narratives in news media, focusing on under-researched regions and post-pandemic contexts.
Findings
Five key thematic narratives were identified in global news media about childlessness.
Media narratives serve four discursive functions: politicising, moralising, pathologising, and humanising.
The study highlights how media shape stigma and health equity around reproductive choices.
Abstract
Childlessness is an increasingly visible phenomenon. Once predominantly associated with high-income settings, it now spans diverse cultural, economic, and political contexts, including the Global South. Among recent demographic shifts, childlessness has emerged as one of the most ideologically charged and widely debated topics in public discourse, particularly through media narratives. Although media are often overlooked in mainstream public health models, they play critical roles as structural and intermediary determinants of health - shaping issue framing, amplifying voices, and legitimizing solutions. Yet little is known about how childlessness is represented in global media, especially outside the Global North and in the post-pandemic era. This study analysed news media representations of childlessness from a public health perspective, drawing on 131 news articles from 101 outlets…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health · Global Maternal and Child Health · Gender, Feminism, and Media
