| Literature DB >> 26652079 |
Keshvar Samadaee-Gelehkolaee1, Barry W McCarthy, Alireza Khalilian, Zeinab Hamzehgardeshi, Sepideh Peyvandi, Forouza Elyasi, Maryam Shahidi.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many factors impact on marital satisfaction. Related factors include demographic factors, assisted reproductive techniques, psychological health, quality of life, psychological, socioeconomic and family support, and sexual function.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26652079 PMCID: PMC4877237 DOI: 10.5539/gjhs.v8n5p96
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob J Health Sci ISSN: 1916-9736
Check List of criteria for assessing the quality of studies on marital relationship in the infertile
| A. a psychometrical questionnaire is applied |
| B. a chief objective of the study is to investigate the marital relationship |
| C. standardized or valid self-report measurements are utilized to assess the marital relationship in the infertile and/or their spouse/partners. |
| D. a description consists of at least two socio-demographic variables (e.g., age, sex, economical status educational status, etc). |
| E. a description presents at least two clinical variables (e.g., type of infertility, duration of infertility, treatment method(s), etc). |
| F. inclusion and/or exclusion criteria are provided |
| G. the study describes predictors or contributing factors using correlation analyses, multivariate analyses, or structural equation models) |
| H. rates of participation for the infertile groups and/or their spouses/partners are described (defined as the percentage of eligible patients giving their informed consent) and these rates exceed 70% |
| I. information is provided about the ratio between non-responders versus responders. |
| J. the study size is consisting of at least 50 patients |
| K. the collection of data are prospectively gathered and cross-section. |
| L. the design is longitudinal (more than 1 year) |
| M. the process of data collection is described (e.g., interview or self-report, etc.) |
| N. the follow-up period is at least 6 months |
| O. the loss to follow-up is described and is less than < 20%. |
| P. the results are compared between two groups or more (e.g., healthy population, groups with different treatment stages, different types of infertility, or treatment types) and/or results are compared with at least two points in time (e.g., pre- versus post- treatment) |
Ref. (Tao, Coates, & Maycock, 2011).
Marriage Satisfaction Related Factors
| Marriage Satisfaction Related Factors | Related papers No. | Including | Action Mechanism | Recommendations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Demographic | 13 | Age, gender, education, marriage duration, infertility duration, previous child, family type (nuclear, extended), income | Via support & stress determination, couple’s relationships & marriage satisfaction change. | Depending on the infertility cause (male-female) & duration (more than 2 yrs), the couple needs various kinds of consultation, for example, male infertility requires sexual consultation. |
| Using fertility assisting methods | 11 | Taking medicine, embryo donation, gamete donation, IUI, IVF, ICSI | Due to drug side-effects induced stresses & not psychologically & morally adapting with embryo & gamete donation acceptance, especially when there is conflict between the couple. | Education about the medicinal short-& long-term effects, education about the invasive methods steps and their due risks, psychological & religious consultation, in case of failure in treatment, women’s follow-up for 6 months in terms of depression & anxiety. |
| Psychological health | 12 | The probability of getting affected by Psychological disorders & Obsessive-Compulsive | Infertility & unsuccessful treatment induced stress creates disorders in hormones level & neurotransmitters, making the person prone to psychological disorder. High depression in women & high anxiety in men have been reported. | In the infertile couple, paying attention to adjustment mechanisms and their modification, focusing on depression & anxiety symptoms, particularly suicide & various medicinal treatments and psychotherapy. |
| Life quality | 8 | The person’s mental image about resigning to life conditions | In fact, the study items in life quality & marriage satisfaction overlap, thus to promote each of them results in the other one’s promotion. | Increasing the patients’ knowledge about the existing treatment methods, not doing invasive methods as much as possible, analyzing sexual disorders and removing them, if existing. |
| Psychological, socioeconomic & family supports | 11 | Support by consulting, the spouse, the couple’s family, removing the stigma in society, covering infertility treatments by insurance | Decreasing stress, accepting childless life by the couple, assurance in terms of financial affairs provision to continue treatment. | Education to families on how to behave with the infertile couple, using media to promote infertility assisting methods in society, political support of research plans in diverse infertility treatments & consultation at infertility treatment centers. |
| Sexual function | 8 | Erection disorder, ejaculation praecox, arousal & orgasm disorder, lowered sexual desire | Because of self-concept damage, self-confidence, masculinity & femininity feeling, feeling deficiency. | Examining depression, training the question goals in creating a sexual relationship. |
List of criteria for assessing the quality of studies on marital relationship in the in infertile couples
| Studies | Criteria for methodological assessment of study quality | Score | |||||||||||||||
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| A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | ||
| Moura-Ramos M et al. (2011) | + | + | + | + | + | - | - | + | + | + | - | - | + | - | - | + | |
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Figure 1Flowchart of study selection progress