A new study
claims to have found compelling evidence for the theory that people who have
older brothers are more likely to be gay, known as the “fraternal birth order
effect”.
The fraternal
birth order effect is a theory that has existed since the 1950s, and it
suggests that an immune response during pregnancy, in reaction to proteins
produced by a male foetus, produces antibodies that remain in the bloodstream
and plays a part in the sexual development of children from future pregnancies.
The theory is
disputed, and evidence for it has often relied on small samples, until now.
A new study,
published this week in the Journal of Sex Research, found “clear evidence of a
fraternal birth order effect on homosexuality”.
Australian
scientists Francisco Perales, Christine Ablaza, and Jan Kabatek used
data from more than nine million people in Dutch population registers,
following “the life trajectories of… people born between 1940 and 1990”.
Although the
data did not record the sexual orientation of individuals, it did show which
people had entered into same-sex marriages and civil partnerships, which researchers
used “as a proxy for homosexuality”.
Scientists
found, in line with the fraternal birth order effect theory, that the more
older brothers a person had, the more likely they were to enter a same-sex
union.
Men with one
older brother were 12 per cent more likely to enter a same-sex union than men
with one older sister, and they were 21 per cent more likely to do so that men
one younger sibling.
However, a man
with three older brothers was 80 per cent more likely to enter a same-sex
partnership that those with three younger brother, and 41 per cent more like
than those with older sisters.
Most previous
research has focused on at fraternal birth order influencing the sexuality of
men. This time, researchers found: “We documented the same pattern of results
among women. We found women are also more likely to enter a same-sex union if
they have older brothers.”
While many in
the LGBT+ community question the need to know the origins or “cause” of
non-heterosexual sexual orientation, the researchers wrote in a piece for The Conversation: “A growing body of research is
attempting to shed light on why some people experience same-sex sexual
attraction and others don’t.
“These studies
have substantial implications for public opinion and debate, and subsequently
the treatment of LGBTIQ+ people.
“For example,
we know people
who view sexual orientation as a product of biological factors (such as
hormones or genetics) are more likely to support sexual minorities and their
civil rights, compared to those who view it as a product of social factors or
individual choice.”
They added:
“Of course, in an ideal society, the rights and respect people are afforded
should not depend on whether their sexual identity is ‘innate’ or ‘a choice’.
But unfortunately, these issues still loom large in contemporary debate,
further highlighting the importance of our findings.
“A biological
basis for human sexuality suggests harmful practices like conversion therapy can’t alter someone’s sexual
orientation.
“It also
discredits claims homosexuality can be ‘taught’ (such as through sexual
diversity education at schools) or ‘passed on’ (such as through same-sex couples adopting children)… Like others before us,
we consider this research essential.
“Understanding
the mechanisms behind sexual orientation can offer insights into what makes
people who they are, and helps normalise the full spectrum of human sexual
diversity.”
SOURCE: PINK NEWS
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