A new study examined women who underwent fertility treatment but did not
conceive to see whether those who sustained a desire to have a child had worse
mental health outcomes.
by John
Tyburski
Copyright © Daily
Digest News, KPR Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
For women
who want to have a child and seek fertility treatment to do so, letting go
after a failed attempt may be important for their long-term mental health. A new study published on Tuesday in the journal Human
Reproduction looked at the impact that fertility treatment-related factors,
history of childbirth, and sustained child-wish have on the long-term happiness
and mental well-being of women who underwent fertility treatment but did not
become pregnant.
Sustaining
a desire to have a child, a so-called “child-wish,” is more strongly,
positively associated with adverse long-term mental health outcomes than are
fertility treatment-related factors and having at least one child through past
pregnancy already.
Dr. Sofia
Gameiro at the Cardiff Fertility Studies Research Group in the Cardiff
University School of Psychology, Cardiff, Wales, UK, and her colleagues in The
Netherlands studied 7,148 adult Dutch women who began fertility treatment at
any of 12 in vitro fertilization hospitals from 1995 through 2000.
“We found
that women who still wished to have children were up to 2.8 times more likely
to develop clinically significant mental health problems than women who did not
sustain a child-wish,” said Gameiro in a statement. “For women with no
children, those with a child-wish were 2.8 times more likely to have worse
mental health than women without a child-wish. For women with children, those
who sustained a child-wish were 1.5 times more likely to have worse mental
health than those without a child-wish. This link between a sustained wish for
children and worse mental health was irrespective of the women’s fertility
diagnosis and treatment history.”
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