A dyadic approach to depression, resilience and quality of life on marital adjustment among infertile couples in Karachi, Pakistan: A cross‐sectional study

Background Infertility is a major reproductive health problem in Pakistan. It has the potential to cause serious negative impact on a couple's marital life and psychological health. Aim This study aimed to assess the factors associated with maladjustment among infertile couples. Method An analy...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of nursing practice 2022-12, Vol.28 (6), p.e13090-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Bhamani, Shireen Shehzad, Zahid, Nida, Rizvi, Arjumand, Shaheen, Fariha, Shah, Nasim Zahid, Sachwani, Saima, Farooq, Salima, Azam, Syed Iqbal, Asad, Nargis
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Infertility is a major reproductive health problem in Pakistan. It has the potential to cause serious negative impact on a couple's marital life and psychological health. Aim This study aimed to assess the factors associated with maladjustment among infertile couples. Method An analytical cross‐sectional design was employed. Validated scales were used to assess marital adjustment, depression, resilience and quality of life among infertile couples. Purposive sampling was employed to enrol 334 infertile couples from a private infertility medical centre, of Karachi, Pakistan. Results Among couples, marital adjustment scores were comparable, but resilience and quality of life were significantly low among wives whereas depression was significantly high among wives compared with husbands. Wives' marital adjustment was positively correlated with husband's resilience and quality of life and negatively related with his depression. After employing adjusted actor–partner interdependence modelling, wives' own depression and resilience had significant effect on their marital adjustment and their partner's resilience, depression and quality of life did not have any impact on their outcome. On the contrary, wives' resilience had a significant effect in increasing the marital adjustment of their husband. Conclusion This study highlights the need to promote psychological support (resilience building skills) or couples' therapy to all those couples undergoing infertility treatment. Summary statement What is already known about this topic? Infertility has an unequal impact on women and men. Women tend to have marital distress and more negative psychological impact than men. Infertility is ignominy for families of the infertile couple. Constant pressure from families to conceive increases psychological distress in the infertile couple. Infertility is a public health issue that impacts both couples therefore, a dyadic solution must be considered. What this paper adds? This is the first study to look at infertile couples' marital maladjustment, depression, resilience and quality of life, as well as their impact on other partners. According to the findings, depression was found to be significantly higher in wives than in their husbands, while resilience and quality of life were significantly lower in wives compared with their husbands. Depression and resilience had a significant actor effect on the wife's marital adjustment, whereas the husband's depression, quality o
ISSN:1322-7114
1440-172X
DOI:10.1111/ijn.13090