scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

‘You are a man because you have children’: experiences, reproductive health knowledge and treatment‐seeking behaviour among men suffering from couple infertility in South Africa

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
These findings improve the understanding of the reproductive health needs of men suffering from couple infertility in Africa and are essential for the effective integration of male partners into modern infertility management.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In Africa, infertility traditionally has been viewed as a female problem. This study explores reproductive health knowledge, health-seeking behaviour and experiences related to involuntary childlessness in men suffering from couple infertility. METHODS: Twenty-seven men from a diverse cultural urban community in South Africa participated in in-depth interviews at the time of their first visit to an infertility clinic in a tertiary referral centre. RESULTS: Men had little knowledge about the physiology of human fertility, causes of infertility and modern treatment options. Awareness of male factor infertility was, however, high. Most men appeared involved in the health-seeking process. Men described their emotional reactions to childlessness and the impact of infertility on marital stability, and many reported that infertile men suffered from stigmatization, verbal abuse and loss of social status. CONCLUSIONS: These findings improve our understanding of the reproductive health needs of men suffering from couple infertility in Africa. This understanding is essential for the effective integration of male partners into modern infertility management. The need for appropriate counselling of men and, most particularly, for education of the community is recognized.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The experience of infertility: A review of recent literature

TL;DR: Examination of research published since the last review of the literature on the socio-psychological impact of infertility concludes that more attention is now being paid to the ways in which the experience of infertility is shaped by social context.
Journal ArticleDOI

Infertility and the provision of infertility medical services in developing countries

TL;DR: Keystones in the successful implementation of infertility care in low-resource settings include simplification of diagnostic and ART procedures, minimizing the complication rate of interventions, providing training-courses for health-care workers and incorporating infertility treatment into sexual and reproductive health- Care programmes.
Journal ArticleDOI

"Life is still going on": reproductive intentions among HIV-positive women and men in South Africa.

TL;DR: Investigation of HIV positive individuals' reproductive intentions and their influencing factors in Cape Town, South Africa finds evidence that prevention of perinatal transmission programs in combination with ART may alter women and men's attitudes in favour of childbearing.
Journal ArticleDOI

A systematic review of factors influencing fertility desires and intentions among people living with HIV/AIDS: implications for policy and service delivery.

TL;DR: Future research that examines fertility desires among PLHIV should include cultural beliefs and practices in the theoretical framework in order to provide a holistic understanding and to enable development of services that meet the reproductive needs ofPLHIV.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fertility intentions and reproductive health care needs of people living with HIV in Cape Town, South Africa: implications for integrating reproductive health and HIV care services.

TL;DR: Overall, greater intentions to have children were associated with being male, having fewer children, living in an informal settlement and use of antiretroviral therapy, with being on HAART strongly associated with women's fertility intentions.
References
More filters
Book

Qualitative inquiry and research design: choosing among five traditions.

TL;DR: Creswell as mentioned in this paper explores the philosophical underpinnings, history and key elements of five qualitative inquiry traditions: biography, phenomenology, grounded theory, ethnography and case study.
Journal ArticleDOI

Infertility and psychological distress: a critical review of the literature.

TL;DR: This essay reviews the literature on the social psychological impact of infertility, paying special attention to the relationship between gender and the infertility experience, and concludes that infertility is a more stressful experience for women than it is for men.
Journal ArticleDOI

Real qualitative researchers do not count: the use of numbers in qualitative research.

TL;DR: Although numbers are important in the treatment of qualitative data, qualitative researchers should avoid the counting pitfalls of verbal counting, overcounting, misleading counting, and acontextual counting.
Journal ArticleDOI

Worldwide patterns of infertility: is africa different?

TL;DR: The World Health Organisation sponsored a multicentre, collaborative investigation of a standard approach to evaluating infertile couples, conducted between 1979 and 1984 in thirty-three medical centres in twenty-five countries throughout the developed and developing world.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stigma: the hidden burden of infertility.

TL;DR: This research focuses on 25 U.S. women who sought medical treatment for infertility and describes their perception of the stigma associated with infertility, applying a critical, feminist perspective to the analysis of the women's lived experiences within the social and medical contexts in which they occur.
Related Papers (5)