Relationships between psychological well-being, lifestyle factors and fertility
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Published:2015-03
Issue:12
Volume:156
Page:483-492
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ISSN:0030-6002
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Container-title:Orvosi Hetilap
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language:hu
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Short-container-title:Orvosi Hetilap
Author:
Lakatos Enikő12, Szabó Gábor3, F. Szigeti Judit4, Balog Piroska1
Affiliation:
1. Semmelweis Egyetem, Általános Orvostudományi Kar Magatartástudományi Intézet Budapest Nagyvárad tér 4. 1089 2. Semmelweis Egyetem Mentális Egészségtudományok Doktori Iskola Budapest 3. Budapesti Kommunikációs és Üzleti Főiskola Budapest 4. Semmelweis Egyetem, Általános Orvostudományi Kar Klinikai Pszichológia Tanszék Budapest
Abstract
Introduction: 10 to 15% of the Hungarian fertile age population struggles with reproductivity problems. Previous researches have shown that psychological well-being and lifestyle factors play a pivotal role in overall health status, which is closely related to fertility. Aim: The aim of the study was to examine fertility-related psychological and lifestyle factors in a Hungarian sample. Method: 194 women (115 infertile and 79 fertile) took part in the study. Standardized, validated questionnaires were used for the assessment of psychological factors and self-administered questions were used for exploring lifestyle factors. Results: The results show that infertile women are younger (33.98±4.89 vs. 36.43±5.81 years, p<0.005) and their psychological status is significantly worse compared to their fertile counterparts. The number of their depressive (BDI 14.00±12.21 vs. 7.79±9.17, p<0.005) and anxiety symptoms is higher (STAI-T 48.53±10.56 vs. 40.25±10.65, p<0.005) compared to fertile women. Findings related to lifestyle factors show that lower level of fluid consumption (1.71±0.67 vs. 1.95±0.68, p<0.05) and diet (31.30% vs. 18.42%, p<0.05) is significantly related to infertility. In this sample higher level of fluid consumption was associated with the fertile group (OR = 1.65, CI = 2.58–1.06), independently of body mass index and age. Conclusions: The results confirm the findings of international researches showing that women struggling with infertility are in worse psychological condition than their fertile counterparts. The authors conclude that the findings demand further investigations and follow-up studies in order to more specifically determine the relationship between fluid consumption and fertility. Orv. Hetil., 2015, 156(12), 483–492.
Publisher
Akademiai Kiado Zrt.
Reference48 articles.
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