1. [Psychosocial aspects of the direct path from infertility to the "instant family": are all risks known].
- Author
-
Baor L and Blickstein I
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Informed Consent, Male, Physician-Patient Relations, Family, Infertility, Female psychology, Infertility, Male psychology, Reproductive Techniques, Assisted psychology
- Abstract
Infertility is invariably described as a crisis event. Couples who encounter infertility are further challenged with the accompanied sense of profound losses: loss of health, sexuality, status and prestige, relationship, self-confidence, self-esteem, security, and the fantasy for biological parenthood. Fertility treatments (ART) create hope and cure for the problem on one hand, but place a tremendous burden on the couple's resources on the other. Assisted Reproductive Technologies (ART), carry potential risks for both the infant and for the mother, in addition to diverse negative psychosocial consequences for the couple. However, it seems that couples either ignore these risks or are unaware of them, and therefore, wish to accomplish the "instant family" (more than one child) via a shortcut (one pregnancy). Although it is impossible to ignore the numerous children born with the aid of ART, it is crucial that professionals inform the couple about the medical as well as the psychological consequences that accompany fertility treatments, to enable couples to make more realistic decisions.
- Published
- 2005