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Predictors of infertility-related concerns in a Canadian survey of men and women seeking fertility treatment

Authors :
Togas Tulandi
Neal G Mahutte
Sophia Ouhilal
Skye A. Miner
Hananel Holzer
Margot Kelly-Hedrick
Kirk C. Lo
Stephanie Robins
Carolyn Ells
Peter T.K. Chan
Eden Noah Gelgoot
Phyllis Zelkowitz
Source :
Patient education and counseling. 103(9)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

To examine if and how factors associated with infertility-related concerns and opportunity to discuss concerns differ between male and female fertility patients.A cross-sectional survey of 313 female and 254 male patients recruited from Canadian fertility clinics. An online survey asked about sociodemographic characteristics, psychological distress, the severity of psychosocial concerns on a scale of 0 (not concerned) to 5 (very concerned) related to fertility treatment, and their opportunity and desire to discuss concerns with healthcare providers (HCPs).For women, higher stress, educational attainment and being childless were associated with higher concern (F(6, 287) = 14.73, p.001). For men, higher stress, being religious and longer treatment duration were associated with higher concern (F(8, 222) = 9.87, p.001). No significant difference existed between men's and women's average concern scores (t(558) = -1.62, p = .11) or opportunity to discuss concerns (t(149) = 0.28, p = .78).Our results indicate an unmet need and desire for support among subgroups of patients who were concerned about psychosocial issues related to infertility, but did not have the opportunity to discuss these issues with HCPs.There is a need to tailor resources to address the concerns of male and female fertility patients from diverse sociodemographic backgrounds and with different fertility histories.

Details

ISSN :
18735134
Volume :
103
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Patient education and counseling
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0de451f07455ce3c38dfe126044b0984