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PETBioNewsNewsInvoluntary childlessness has a significant impact, study shows

BioNews

Involuntary childlessness has a significant impact, study shows

Published 19 August 2010 posted in News and appears in BioNews 572

Author

Harriet Vickers

Image by Alan Handyside via the Wellcome Collection. Depicts a human egg soon after fertilisation, with the two parental pronuclei clearly visible.
CC0 1.0
Image by Alan Handyside via the Wellcome Collection. Depicts a human egg soon after fertilisation, with the two parental pronuclei clearly visible.

Involuntary childlessness may have a bigger negative impact on peoples' lives than previously thought. A researcher studying couples who unsuccessfully underwent IVF treatment say these people had a lower quality of life than couples with children...

Involuntary childlessness may have a bigger negative impact on peoples' lives than previously thought. A researcher studying couples who unsuccessfully underwent IVF treatment say these people had a lower quality of life than couples with children.


Dr Marianne Johansson, who is also a midwife at the Institute of Health and Care Sciences, Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Sweden, interviewed men and women two years after they had gone through failed IVF. All the men had a diagnosis of severe male factor infertility.


At the time of the study, 40 per cent had biological children after further IVF treatment and 35 per cent had adopted children. Overall, the women reported childlessness as feeling like bereavement, whilst the men said they often felt frustrated by not knowing the cause of the infertility.


'We then compared this group with couples for whom the treatment had resulted in childbirth, plus a control group of parents without infertility problems who had children of the same age', says Dr Johansson. Two hundred couples in each of these three groups completed a questionnaire. Men and women were studied separately and compared.


As well as their experiences of childlessness, quality of life, health and wellbeing were also studied in the couples. The research concluded that those without children - both men and women - had a significantly poorer quality of life than those for whom IVF had been successful, and also compared to those in the control group.


'They perceived their infertility as central to their lives, and above all that quality of life amongst men without children was more negatively affected than had been previously reported in studies of involuntary childlessness', says Dr Johansson.


The research was published as Dr Johansson's PhD thesis.

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Image by Alan Handyside via the Wellcome Collection. Depicts a human egg soon after fertilisation, with the two parental pronuclei clearly visible.
CC0 1.0
Image by Alan Handyside via the Wellcome Collection. Depicts a human egg soon after fertilisation, with the two parental pronuclei clearly visible.
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Image by Alan Handyside via the Wellcome Collection. Depicts a human egg soon after fertilisation, with the two parental pronuclei clearly visible.
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18 June 2009 • 3 minutes read

How do we view alternative families?

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Most cultures are advocates of procreation partly because it stabilises communities, it makes individual and collective economic sense, and it is culturally the norm. Consequently, not being able to conceive naturally sets infertile individuals and couples apart from the fertile majority of people who do not have to think about...

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