PERCEPTION OF PAIN AND THE OOCYTE DONOR EXPERIENCE: A RETROSPECTIVE ANALYSIS OF COMMERCIAL US DONORS
Pain is a commonly reported side effect among oocyte donors, but literature addressing donor pain perception is lacking. To better understand pain perception among donors and bring attention to the short-term effects of donation to donors, authors of the presented study emailed a 40-question quantitative and qualitative survey to a group of Donor Egg Bank USA donors who donated between 2016 and 2019. The survey covered subjects such as demographics, donor’s motivation for donating, reproductive history, and the consent and donor experience. Of the 503 oocyte donors who opened the survey link, 48.9% (246 participants) completed at least 90% of the survey. A large portion of women reported more pain than expected (42.7%). Particularly, the largest pain disparity between expectations and experience occurred in the week after retrieval (25.8%). Donors also reported high levels of satisfaction and felt that the consent process prepared them for retrieval, with 94% recalling being counselled on the potential for pain. This study provides information that may be helpful to women who are considering oocyte donation, but further studies should address the short-term, as well as long-term, effects of pain to oocyte donors.