Infertility Clinical Trial
Official title:
Impact of Reproductive Problems on Physical, Emotional, Social Life Areas in Couples Receiving Infertility Treatment
Reproduction is in fact the most basic instinct of all living things. The fertility of a
woman is both a biological fact and a determinant of gender role in society. Motherhood is
still seen as the primary role for women in society. Infertility, which manifests itself as a
sudden and unexpected life crisis, is an unexpected, perhaps unexplained, condition that
spreads over a long period of time, creates extreme stress and forces adjustment mechanisms.
Infertility can affect the quality of life by adversely affecting the physical, emotional,
social and relational living spaces of people.
The present study examines the effects of reproductive problems on the quality of life in
women who receive infertility treatment, and in the direction of the results obtained, the
treatment recipients of the health workers are planned to help develop a holistic perspective
that takes into account not only reproductive problems but also other affected living areas.
Infertility is a psychological threat, emotional stress, economically expensive, painful and
complex life crisis for the treatment for couples. Infertility has negative effects on social
and psychological well-being rather than physical health. Infertile people accept this
situation as a serious apology, and as a result of their emotional feeling, they are isolated
from their surroundings over time. Therefore, infertility is not a simple gynecologic
syndrome, and it is a condition that especially affects the woman very biologically,
psychologically and socially, resulting in a decrease in health and quality of life. While
infertility is not a life threatening health problem, the couple threatens healthy life with
negative effects on mental health and quality of life and is defined as a life crisis by some
authors. Studies in infertile couples have shown that women experience more anxiety,
depression, stress and hostility in their lives than men, and that sexual life is negatively
affected.
Today, unforeseen infertility, often unexplained and unpredictable, is considered to have
created a stressful situation that pushes the coping mechanisms for a couple and destroys the
sense of health and integrity.
The more a woman's identity is defined by her being a mother, the greater the amount of her
psychological distress and disability. The longer the duration of infertility, the more
dominance and hopelessness dominate and this can result in a greater depression. Generally,
psychosocial effects of infertility also affect the components of quality of life in a
negative way. The most affected areas are mental health, emotional behavior, environmental
psychology, physical and social functions.
In many studies, it was determined that stress, anxiety and depression scores of infertile
couples were higher than the fertile population. Anger, nervousness, decreased self-esteem,
poor interpersonal relationships, reduced life satisfaction, anxiety and depression are
frequently seen psychological disorders associated with infertility.
As a result, infertility is a stressful event for couples with children, and it is also a
condition that affects the relationship of couples. The infertile couples have profoundly
affected their marriages and social lives because of the long treatment duration, the
destructive effect on the continuing mental health, the complexity of the treatment
procedures, the unusual and long steps required and the consequences of the IVF treatment.
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