Mood disorders, psychiatric symptoms, and distress in women presenting for infertility evaluation

Fertility and sterility, 52(3), 425-432

DOI 10.1016/s0015-0282(16)60912-3 PMID 2776896 Source

Abstract

Women who undergo treatment for infertility frequently report depression, but it is crucial to distinguish between subjective distress, symptoms, and clinical depressive disorders. In the initial assessment of a prospective, longitudinal study, 59 women presenting for infertility treatment were compared with 35 women presenting for routine gynecological care. Infertility patients and controls were not significantly different on self-report measures of partner satisfaction, sexual functioning, or self-esteem. There was also no difference in psychiatric symptomatology, or in the percentage of subjects who were currently experiencing or had ever experienced a major depressive episode. However, the infertility patients perceived themselves to have been already quite affected by their inability to conceive. For instance, 49.2% reported changes in their sexual functioning and 74.6% reported changes in their mood.

Topics

infertility evaluation psychological distress, depression infertility workup women, mood disorders fertility treatment, infertility emotional impact assessment, psychiatric symptoms infertility patients, infertility diagnosis mental health, depression screening fertility clinic, psychological effects infertility testing, infertility related distress measurement, couple centered infertility counseling

Cite this article

Downey, J., Yingling, S., McKinney, M., Husami, N., Jewelewicz, R., & Maidman, J. (1989). Mood disorders, psychiatric symptoms, and distress in women presenting for infertility evaluation. *Fertility and sterility*, *52*(3), 425-432. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0015-0282(16)60912-3

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