| Literature DB >> 26911144 |
Réka E Sexty1, Jehan Hamadneh2, Sabine Rösner3, Thomas Strowitzki4, Beate Ditzen5, Bettina Toth6, Tewes Wischmann7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Only a few studies have reported cross-cultural comparisons regarding psychosocial consequences of infertility. Differences between societies with different cultural backgrounds were revealed and seemed to be based on the importance of pronatalism. Our aim was to measure cross-cultural differences in fertility specific quality of life of infertile couples in Germany, Hungary and Jordan who attend a fertility center in a cross-sectional study.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26911144 PMCID: PMC4765134 DOI: 10.1186/s12955-016-0429-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
Sociodemographic and medical characteristics in Jordan, Germany and Hungary
| Women | Men | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jordan | Germany | Hungary | Jordan | Germany | Hungary | |||
| ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | |||
| M (SD) | M (SD) | M (SD) | F | M (SD) | M (SD) | M (SD) | F | |
| Age | 30.7 (6.1) |
| 32.4 (4.9) | 15.3* | 36.5 (8.19 | 37.9 (6.2) |
| 8.4* |
| Duration of relationship |
|
|
| 23.2* | ||||
| Duration of child wish |
| 2.8 (2.1) | 2.7 (1.9) | 24.1* | ||||
| Duration of treatment |
| 0.6 (0.9) | 0.7 (1.5) | 99.3* | ||||
| N (%) | N (%) | N (%) | χ2 | N (%) | N (%) | N (%) | χ2 | |
| Educational level | 52.0* | 51.5* | ||||||
| Low | 19 (15) |
| 22 (17) |
|
|
| ||
| Medium | 24 (19) |
| 40 (32) | 33 (36) |
| 39 (31) | ||
| High |
| 45 (36) | 64 (51) |
| 39 (32) | 40 (32) | ||
| Medical diagnosis | 50.9* | |||||||
| None/unexplained | 60 (24) | 66 (25) |
| |||||
| Female only factor | 76 (30) | 76 (31) | 80 (32) | |||||
| Male only factor | 60 (24) | 64 (27) | 52 (21) | |||||
| Mixed factor | 56 (22) | 42 (17) |
| |||||
| Child with the partner | 48.9* | |||||||
| Yes |
| 14 (6) | 14 (6) | |||||
Low educational level: primary and low secondary education, Medium educational level: high secondary education, High educational level: university
M mean, SD standard deviation, N number
* p < 0.001
a values marked bold significantly differed from values of both other countries at least at level p < 0.05
b values marked bold significantly differed from values of Hungary at least at level p < 0.05
Gender (within-couples) differences (calculated with paired t-test) on FertiQoL scales in Jordan, Germany and Hungary
| Jordan | Germany | Hungary | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Women | Men | Women | Men | Women | Men | ||||
| ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | ( | ||||
| FertiQoL Scales | M (SD) | M (SD) | T (df = 125) | M (SD) | M (SD) | T (df = 122) | M (SD) | M (SD) | T (df = 125) |
| Emotional | 52.8 (21.5) |
| 4.97* | 60.5 (17.6) |
| 8.58* | 69.0 (16.3) |
| 7.53* |
| α | .77 | .81 | .79 | .84 | .77 | .67 | |||
| Mind/Body | 62.7 (23.7) |
| 4.55* | 72.2 (16.2) |
| 7.05* | 76.5 (16.7) |
| 7.97* |
| α | .85 | .89 | .81 | .82 | .83 | .80 | |||
| Relational | 73.3 (16.8) | 75.1 (15.1) | 1.45 | 80.2 (11.6) | 77.8 (13.4) | 1.94 | 83.3 (13.4) | 85.4 (12.8) | 1.72 |
| α | .60 | .60 | .64 | .64 | .65 | .67 | |||
| Social | 67.8 (19.7) |
| 3.99* | 73.0 (17.2) | 74.2 (13.9) | 0.79 | 80.3 (13.8) |
| 5.32* |
| α | .73 | .75 | .75 | .67 | .64 | .61 | |||
| FertiQoL AB | 3.0 (0.7) | 3.0 (0.79) | 0.61 | 2.9 (0.6) | 3.0 (0.6) | 0.36 | 2.8 (0.5) | 2.9 (0.5) | 0.13 |
FertiQoL AB: calculated as the mean of the scores of the two general questions of FertiQoL (A, B)
Significantly higher scores within-couples (indicating higher QoL for men) are marked bold
M mean, SD standard deviation, α: Cronbach’s α, *p < 0.001
Cross-country (between-couples) differences in joint FertiQoL-scores of the couples (F-value and PES for repeated-measures ANCOVAs post hoc adjusted with Bonferroni are shown)
| FertiQoL Scales | Jordanian couples | German couples | Hungarian couples | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | ( | ( | ||||||
| M | SE | M | SE | M | SE | F (df = 2) | PES | |
| Emotional |
| 1.8 |
| 1.6 |
| 1.4 | 20.2** | .10 |
| Mind/Body | 69.4 a | 1.8 | 75.9a | 1.4 |
| 1.5 | 12.7** | .06 |
| Relational | 75.2 a | 1.4 | 79.1a | 1.3 |
| 1.2 | 9.0** | .05 |
| Social | 73.1 | 1.6 | 72.3 | 1.4 |
| 1.3 | 20.8** | .10 |
| FertiQoL AB | 3.1 | 0.1 | 2.9 | 0.1 |
| 0.1 | 4.4* | .02 |
Values marked bold: significant ANCOVA-differences after controlling for the mediating variables (age, educational level, duration of relationship, duration of child wish, duration of treatment, type of diagnosis, child with the partner)
M mean, SE standard error, PES partial eta square
*p < 0.05 **p < 0.01
a significantly differed from values of both other countries at least at level p ≤ 0.01
b significantly differed from Jordanian values at least at level p ≤ 0.05
Fig. 1Female scores of FertiQoL Total scale in different published studies. Values: female scores of FertiQoL Total scale. Data were published in recent papers with clinical samples (Boivin et al., 2011; Aarts et al., 2011; Karabulut et al., 2013; Heredia et al., 2013). Combined scores of 291 women and 75 men were reported in the sample of English speaking countries, scores of solely women were reported in Dutch, Turkish and Spanish samples, supplemented by the women’s mean scores of the three samples of our present study