Infertility can take the Fun out of Women’s Sex Lives

girl-97433_960_720

Women seeking fertility treatment may experience a negative impact on their sex lives.

“We weren’t surprised at all to find sexual distress in couples who are infertile,” said senior study author Tami Rowen of the University of California-San Francisco’s Irene Betty Moore Women’s Hospital. “Sex takes on a really different meaning for people trying to get pregnant.”

Infertility affects approximately 6.7 million women in the US, Rowen and her colleagues write in the journal Sexual Medicine.

Couples with infertility have significantly more anxiety, depression and stress, and that can have an ongoing effect on quality of life and the health of a marriage.

To gauge the impact on sexual health among women, the researchers surveyed 382 women in couples seeking fertility treatment at academic or private clinics in the San Francisco area.

Almost 60 per cent of couples included in the study were seeking treatment for female infertility only, while 30 per cent involved female and male infertility factors and seven per cent involved only male factor infertility.

Sex takes on a really different meaning

The study team measured what they termed sexual impact with a seven-item questionnaire, including questions about a participant’s amount of sexual enjoyment, perceived attractiveness to partner, inability to have sex because of fertility problems and persistent thoughts about having a child during intercourse.

The results were then translated into a sexual impact score ranging from zero to 90, with higher scores indicating more severe impact.

The majority of participants were between 20 and 45 years old. More than 40 per cent had been married at least five years and three-quarters had no children. Many had been treated with oral medications, injectable fertility drugs and intrauterine insemination before entering the study.

On average, the women had a sexual impact score of 38, compared to 25 for men.

Women who perceived their fertility issues as due only to male factors had the lowest sexual impact, while those who believed their own infertility was the only cause had the highest sexual impact scores.

“Women carry this burden so much and there’s so much emotion tied to women’s reproductive goals,” Rowen said.

Women younger than age 40 had higher impact scores than those over age 40.

“A previous study showed that women seem to be more affected than men in their sexual life and they have greater tendency to classify the marital relationship as bad when the couple fails to conceive,” said Lucia Alves S. Lara of Ribeirao Preto Medical School from the University of Sao Paulo in Brazil.

Source: Times of Malta

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *