| Literature DB >> 34948752 |
Michelle Herminia Mesquita de Castro1, Carolina Rodrigues Mendonça1, Matias Noll1,2,3, Fernanda Sardinha de Abreu Tacon1, Waldemar Naves do Amaral1.
Abstract
Women undergoing assisted reproduction treatment without being able to become pregnant, and experiencing pregnancy loss after assisted reproduction, are triggering factors for prolonged grief and mourning. This review aims to investigate the psychosocial aspects of gestational grief among women who have undergone infertility treatment. We searched the databases of MEDLINE/PubMed, EMBASE, CINAHL, Scopus, ScienceDirect, and Lilacs for works published up to 5 March 2021. The outcomes analyzed were negative and positive psychosocial responses to gestational grief among women suffering from infertility and undergoing assisted human reproduction treatment. Eleven studies were included, which yielded 316 women experiencing infertility who were undergoing treatment. The most frequently reported negative psychosocial manifestations of grief response were depression (6/11, 54.5%), despair or loss of hope/guilt/anger (5/11, 45.5%), anxiety (4/11, 36.4%), frustration (3/11, 27.3%), and anguish/shock/suicidal thoughts/isolation (2/11, 18.2%). Positive psychosocial manifestations included the hope of becoming pregnant (4/6, 66.6%) and acceptance of infertility after attempting infertility treatment (2/6, 33.3%). We identified several negative and positive psychosocial responses to gestational grief in women experiencing infertility. Psychological support before, during, and after assisted human reproduction treatment is crucial for the management of psychosocial aspects that characterize the grief process of women experiencing infertility who become pregnant and who lose their pregnancy. Our results may help raise awareness of the area of grief among infertile women and promote policy development for the mental health of bereaved women.Entities:
Keywords: abortion; fetal death; grief; infertility; psychological wellbeing; spontaneous
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34948752 PMCID: PMC8701103 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph182413143
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Study selection PRISMA flow diagram.
Characteristics and quality assessment of included studies.
| Author and (Year) | Location/Country | Type of Study and Questionnaire | Sample Size | Control Group | Sample Type | Infertility Treatments | Quality of Evidence | Conflict of Interest | Ethical Approval |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quantitative Observational Studies | |||||||||
| Baram et al. (1988) | New York, United States | Retrospective cross-sectional study; Own questionnaire | N/A | Women who had infertility treatment failure | IVF | ⨁⨁⨁◯ MODERATE | NR | NR | |
| Lee et al. (2010) | Taiwan, China | Cross-sectional study; Grief responses questionnaire | N/A | Women who had infertility treatment failure | IVF | ⨁⨁⨁◯ MODERATE | NR | NR | |
| Lukse & Vacc (1999) | North Carolina, United States | Cross-sectional study; Grief Experience Inventory; Depression Adjective Checklist; and Ways of Coping Checklist | N/A | Women being treated for infertility | IVF ( | ⨁⨁⨁◯ MODERATE | NR | NR | |
| Qualitative Studies | |||||||||
| Bell et al. (2013) | New South Wales, Australia | Qualitative research with an interview based on phenomenology | N/A | Women who had infertility treatment failure | IVF | ** | No | Yes | |
| Fieldsend & Smith (2020) | London, United Kingdom | Qualitative research with interpretive phenomenological analysis and interview | N/A | Women being treated for infertility | IVF | ** | No | NR | |
| Freda et al. (2003) | NY, United States | Qualitative research with interview based on phenomenology | N/A | Women who had infertility treatment failure | IVF, IUI | * | NR | NR | |
| Greenfeld & Decherney (1988) | New Haven, United States | Qualitative research with semistructured psychosocial interview | N/A | Women who had infertility treatment failure | IVF | * | NR | NR | |
| Hasanpoor-Azghdy et al. (2014) | Tehran, Iran | Qualitative study with interviews conducted using qualitative content analysis | N/A | Women who had infertility treatment failure | M, IUI e IVF | ** | No | Sim | |
| Harris & Daniluk (2010) | Ontario, Canada | Qualitative and phenomenological study with in-depth interviews, recorded on tape | N/A | Women who had infertility treatment failure | Medication, IUI, IVF, FET | ** | NR | Yes | |
| Johansson & Berg (2005) | Goteborg, Suécia | Qualitative research with interview | N/A | Women who had infertility treatment failure | IVF | * | NR | Yes | |
| Volgsten et al. (2010) | Uppsala, Sweden | Qualitative research with individual semistructured interviews with content analysis | N/A | Women who had infertility treatment failure | IVF | ** | NR | Yes | |
NR, not reported; N/A, not applicable; M, medicinal; IUI, intrauterine insemination; IVF, in vitro fertilization; FET, frozen embryo transfer; GRADE, Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluations; ⨁◯◯◯ a filled circle, very low quality; ⨁⨁◯◯ two filled circles, poor quality; ⨁⨁⨁◯ three filled circles, moderate quality; ⨁⨁⨁⨁ four filled circles, high quality. Qualitative studies were rated low (* one star: 0–3 points), medium (** two stars: 4–7 points), and high quality (*** three stars: 8–10 points).
Psychosocial aspects of grief in women undergoing infertility treatment: quantitative studies.
| Author (Year) | Psychosocial Aspects | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Negatives | Positive | ||
| Lee et al. (2010) | Responses to grief: | Coping strategies: | |
| Baram et al. (1988) | Depression: 66% | NR | |
| Lukse & Vacc(1999) | In vitro fertilization | Ovulation induction | NR |
NR: not reported.
Psychosocial aspects of grief in women undergoing infertility treatment: qualitative studies.
| Author (Year) | Psychosocial Aspects | |
|---|---|---|
| Negatives | Positive | |
| Greenfeld & Decherney (1988) | Feelings of self-guilt and guilt, anger, emotional and somatic anguish, worry and hostility for not becoming pregnant even after the treatment. | NR |
| Bell et al. (2013) | Anger and frustration at not being able to conceive naturally. | Cycle of hope and empowerment, despair, repair, and back to hope in each menstrual cycle. |
| Fieldsend & Smith (2020) | Prolonged grief, pain associated with failed infertility treatment and devastation upon learning of embryo death, | Hope in attempting infertility treatment, |
| Freda et al. (2003) | Grief and disbelief. | The inner struggle between hope and hopelessness for future fertility. |
| Hasanpoor-Azghdy et al. (2014) | Psychological consequences of infertility and medical interventions: psychological turmoil, fear and anxiety and worry, grief and depression. | NR |
| Harris & Daniluk (2010) | Anguish heightened by pressure from family members to try to become pregnant and insensitive comments that reduced the extent of the losses. | Happiness knowing that they were pregnant. |
| Johansson & Berg (2005) | Pain for not having children, feelings of incapacity, sadness, feelings of emptiness with the miscarriage. | The treatment gave them a strong sense of self-worth. |
| Volgsten et al. (2010) | Unresolved grief after unsuccessful IFV. | NR |
NR: not reported; IVF, in vitro fertilization.
Figure 2Negative and positive psychosocial aspects of grief in women experiencing infertility undergoing infertility treatment.