Boivin Jacky, Carrier Judith, Zulu Joseph Mumba, Edwards Deborah
School of Psychology. College of Biomedical and Life Sciences, Cardiff University, 70 Park Place, CF10 3AT, Cardiff, Wales, UK.
Wales Centre for Evidence Based Care, School of Health Care Sciences, Cardiff University, Cardiff, Wales, UK.
Reprod Health. 2020 Sep 14;17(1):142. doi: 10.1186/s12978-020-00973-0.
Fear of infertility (FOI) is often reported in studies about reproductive health but this literature not yet mapped. The aim of this rapid scoping review of qualitative studies was to describe the nature of FOI in Africa.
Eligibility criteria were qualitative data from Africa reporting views of women and men of any age. MEDLINE and CINAHL databases were searched for English language citations to February 2019 using keywords related to fear, infertility and Africa. Two independent reviewers screened texts for inclusion.
Of 248 citations identified, 38 qualitative and six review papers were included. FOI was reported in diverse groups (e.g., men, women, fertile, infertile, married, unmarried, teachers, religious leaders). Two types of fears were identified: (1) fear of triggering infertility due to specific reproductive choices and (2) fear of the dire future consequences of infertility. Choices were perceived to affect fertility via internal accumulation and blockage (e.g., of menstrual blood), structural damage (e.g., burnt eggs), internal movement of contraceptive material, deliberate toxicity preventing population growth and behavioral effects impeding sexual activity. Diverse feared consequences of infertility were reported (e.g., polygamy, economic hardships). Fears were reported to affect reproductive behaviour (e.g., stopping contraception), help-seeking and social behaviour.
FOI is a phenomenon that should be studied in its own right. Fears could originate from genuine threats, incorrect knowledge, distortions of truths, or dissemination of false information. Rigorous studies are needed to better understand FOI and integrate it in health education, client counselling and family planning service provision.
在关于生殖健康的研究中,经常会报告对不孕症的恐惧(FOI),但尚未对该文献进行梳理。这项关于定性研究的快速范围综述的目的是描述非洲对不孕症恐惧的本质。
纳入标准为来自非洲的定性数据,报告任何年龄的男性和女性的观点。使用与恐惧、不孕症和非洲相关的关键词,在MEDLINE和CINAHL数据库中检索截至2019年2月的英文文献。两名独立评审员筛选文献以确定是否纳入。
在识别出的248篇文献中,纳入了38篇定性研究论文和6篇综述论文。不同群体(如男性、女性、有生育能力者、不孕者、已婚者、未婚者、教师、宗教领袖)都报告了对不孕症的恐惧。确定了两种恐惧类型:(1)因特定生殖选择而引发不孕症的恐惧,以及(2)对不孕症可怕未来后果的恐惧。人们认为这些选择会通过内部积聚和阻塞(如经血)、结构损伤(如卵子受损)、避孕材料的内部移动、故意的毒性以阻止人口增长以及阻碍性行为的行为影响来影响生育能力。报告了不孕症的各种可怕后果(如一夫多妻制、经济困难)。据报告,恐惧会影响生殖行为(如停止避孕)、寻求帮助和社会行为。
对不孕症的恐惧本身就是一种应加以研究的现象。恐惧可能源于真实威胁、错误知识、对真相的歪曲或虚假信息的传播。需要进行严谨的研究,以更好地理解对不孕症的恐惧,并将其纳入健康教育、客户咨询和计划生育服务提供中。