Stigma and depression among obese infertile women: a cross-sectional study

Abstract Background Obesity causes infertility through various pathways, including disruption of ovarian follicular development, qualitative and quantitative development of the oocyte, fertilization, embryo development, and implantation. In traditional societies such as Türkiye, having children is a...

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Published in:Middle East Fertility Society Journal
Main Authors: Özlem Koç, Hediye Karakoç, Filiz Ersöğütçü
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2024-08-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s43043-024-00199-1
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author Özlem Koç
Hediye Karakoç
Filiz Ersöğütçü
author_facet Özlem Koç
Hediye Karakoç
Filiz Ersöğütçü
author_sort Özlem Koç
collection DOAJ
container_title Middle East Fertility Society Journal
description Abstract Background Obesity causes infertility through various pathways, including disruption of ovarian follicular development, qualitative and quantitative development of the oocyte, fertilization, embryo development, and implantation. In traditional societies such as Türkiye, having children is a determinant of social status. Stigma is defined as a negative sense of social difference from others. Depression is a common health problem in infertile women due to the stressful nature of treatment procedures, fear of treatment failure, and the patient’s inability to become pregnant. In this cross-sectional study, the sample consisted of 161 infertile women from an infertility outpatient clinic of a university hospital in Eastern Turkey. Results It was determined that depression scores had a strong positive correlation with stigma scores. In the multiple regression analysis performed to evaluate the effects of five independent variables determined to have an effect on depression scores, it was seen that the independent variables explained depression levels by 80%. Conclusion The findings of this study suggest that stigma and depression are significant factors affecting the psychosocial and emotional well-being of obese women experiencing infertility. These results underscore the potential need for more comprehensive psychosocial support and assessment for women experiencing infertility related to obesity. Obese patients should be informed about the importance of pre-pregnancy weight reduction and should be encouraged to lose weight before the treatment to reduce the poor obstetrical outcomes due to obesity. Additionally, evidence-based guidelines should be prepared for assisted reproductive techniques for fertility treatment in obese infertile women.
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spelling doaj-art-252f92b4fa074ddd93ba11bb2ffd0ea22025-08-19T23:18:21ZengSpringerOpenMiddle East Fertility Society Journal2090-32512024-08-012911710.1186/s43043-024-00199-1Stigma and depression among obese infertile women: a cross-sectional studyÖzlem Koç0Hediye Karakoç1Filiz Ersöğütçü2Faculty Midwifery Department, Tarsus University Health SciencesSchool of Health Sciences Midwifery Department, Karatay UniversityFaculty Nursing Department, Firat University Health SciencesAbstract Background Obesity causes infertility through various pathways, including disruption of ovarian follicular development, qualitative and quantitative development of the oocyte, fertilization, embryo development, and implantation. In traditional societies such as Türkiye, having children is a determinant of social status. Stigma is defined as a negative sense of social difference from others. Depression is a common health problem in infertile women due to the stressful nature of treatment procedures, fear of treatment failure, and the patient’s inability to become pregnant. In this cross-sectional study, the sample consisted of 161 infertile women from an infertility outpatient clinic of a university hospital in Eastern Turkey. Results It was determined that depression scores had a strong positive correlation with stigma scores. In the multiple regression analysis performed to evaluate the effects of five independent variables determined to have an effect on depression scores, it was seen that the independent variables explained depression levels by 80%. Conclusion The findings of this study suggest that stigma and depression are significant factors affecting the psychosocial and emotional well-being of obese women experiencing infertility. These results underscore the potential need for more comprehensive psychosocial support and assessment for women experiencing infertility related to obesity. Obese patients should be informed about the importance of pre-pregnancy weight reduction and should be encouraged to lose weight before the treatment to reduce the poor obstetrical outcomes due to obesity. Additionally, evidence-based guidelines should be prepared for assisted reproductive techniques for fertility treatment in obese infertile women.https://doi.org/10.1186/s43043-024-00199-1DepressionInfertilityObesityStigma
spellingShingle Özlem Koç
Hediye Karakoç
Filiz Ersöğütçü
Stigma and depression among obese infertile women: a cross-sectional study
Depression
Infertility
Obesity
Stigma
title Stigma and depression among obese infertile women: a cross-sectional study
title_full Stigma and depression among obese infertile women: a cross-sectional study
title_fullStr Stigma and depression among obese infertile women: a cross-sectional study
title_full_unstemmed Stigma and depression among obese infertile women: a cross-sectional study
title_short Stigma and depression among obese infertile women: a cross-sectional study
title_sort stigma and depression among obese infertile women a cross sectional study
topic Depression
Infertility
Obesity
Stigma
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s43043-024-00199-1
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AT hediyekarakoc stigmaanddepressionamongobeseinfertilewomenacrosssectionalstudy
AT filizersogutcu stigmaanddepressionamongobeseinfertilewomenacrosssectionalstudy