The psychological depression response of Iraqi subfertile wives :a descriptive study

no

Authors

  • mousa mohsin

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.70863/karbalajm.v14i2.874

Keywords:

Subfertility, psychology, depression

Abstract

Worldwide about 15% in the childbearing years have subfertility problems. [1]   Many studies demonstrated that men and women have abnormal emotional responses, such as stress, anxiety and depression. Around 5% of couples living in the developed countries experience primary subfertility (inability to have any children or secondary subfertility. [1]   Experts say that only half of all subfertility cases had a physical origin, the rest were unexplained. But researcher notice that most cases of subfertility attributed to physiological cause in the man or woman. About one-third from those physiological problems is identified in the woman, one-third in the man, and about one-tenth of the time in both. Half of the women and 15% of the men said that infertility was the most upsetting experience of their lives. [2]  In Iraq and because of the social regulations and ideas about the female and male thinking the females was under huge psychological pressure towered the pregnancy. In our community less research to examine both men’s and women's reactions to subfertility, men's tend to report experiencing less distress than women. When the problem is diagnosed in their wives, men do not report being as distressed as the women do. Treat infertility by more advanced assisted reproductive technology such as in vitro fertilization (IVF) studies suggest that they may also add to the stress, anxiety, and grief that patients are already experiencing from infertility itself.

Aim: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the prevalence of psychological stress (depression) experienced by subfertile wives

Material and methods: DESIGN: Cross-sectional prospective study held in between March 2018 until March 2020   

SETTING: Face-to-face and online interviews were conducted in study participants

PARTICIPANTS:498 subfertile women were interviewed all suffering from primary or secondary infertility only 433 of them were accept to participating in our study and answered the questionnaire they are from subfertility units in maternity hospitals in Kerbala, Najaf and Babylon and in privet clinics and on social media

METHODS: A structured questionnaire were used and filled by direct interviewed and/or by social media chatting 

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The correlation between depression score and subfertility

RESULTS: The prevalence of depression was very high among infertile women in Kerbala, Najaf and Babylon/Iraq, where 93.5% were depressed

 

References

Deka, P.K. and Sarma, S., 2010. Psychological aspects of infertility. British Journal of Medical Practitioners, 3(3), p.336.

Al-Homaidan, H.T., 2011. Depression among women with primary infertility attending an infertility clinic in Riyadh, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia: rate, severity, and contributing factors. International journal of health sciences, 5(2), p.108

Lukse, M.P. and Vacc, N.A., 1999. Grief, depression, and coping in women undergoing infertility treatment. Obstetrics & Gynecology, 93(2), pp.245-251

Abdel-Hussein, N.H. and Mohamed, S., 2015. Anxiety and Depression among Couples Attending The Infertility Clinic Center in AL-Hilla. kufa Journal for Nursing sciences, 5(3).

Gardi, A.H.H. and Mohammed, S.H., 2013. Assessment of Psychological status of Infertile Women in Erbil Kurdistan Region. kufa Journal for Nursing sciences, 3(1)

Aleessa, A.S.A.J., 2017. Psycho-Social Aspects of Depressive Disorders in Infertile Patients in Baghdad. Medical Journal of Babylon, 14(3), pp.489-494

Sohbati, F., Hasanpoor-Azghady, S.B., Jafarabadi, M., Amiri-Farahani, L. and Mohebbi, M., 2021. Psychological well-being of infertile women and its relationship with demographic factors and fertility history: a cross-sectional study. BMC Women's Health, 21(1), pp.1-7

Bauldry, S., 2015. Variation in the protective effect of higher education against depression. Society and mental health, 5(2), pp.145-16

Alhassan, A., Ziblim, A.R. and Muntaka, S., 2014. A survey on depression among infertile women in Ghana. BMC women's health, 14(1), pp.1-6.

Domar, A.D., Broome, A., Zuttermeister, P.C., Seibel, M. and Friedman, R., 1992. The prevalence and predictability of depression in infertile women. Fertility and sterility, 58(6), pp.1158-1163.

Vo, T.M., Tran, Q.T., Le, C.V., Do, T.T. and Le, T.M., 2019. Depression and associated factors among infertile women at Tu Du hospital, Vietnam: a cross-sectional study. International journal of women's health, 11, p.343

Altaha, M.A., 2016. Health Characteristics of Infertile Women and Their Socio-Demographic Correlates In Al-Anbar Province. Al-Anbar Medical Journal, 13(1).

AltOmoaregba, J.O., James, B.O., Lawani, A.O. and Morakinyo, O., 2011. Psychosocial characteristics of female infertility in a tertiary health institution in Nigeria. Annals of African Medicine, 10(1).

Downloads

Published

2021-12-29 — Updated on 2022-06-15

Versions

How to Cite

mohsin, mousa. (2022). The psychological depression response of Iraqi subfertile wives :a descriptive study: no. Karbala Journal of Medicine, 14(2), 2528–2533. https://doi.org/10.70863/karbalajm.v14i2.874 (Original work published December 29, 2021)

Issue

Section

Research Articles