Brown R A, Magarick R H
Urology. 1979 Jul;14(1):55-8. doi: 10.1016/0090-4295(79)90214-0.
Forty-four childless men and 51 vasectomized parents were compared as to their childhood backgrounds, marital satisfaction, social/emotional adjustment, physical and emotional problems attributed to the vasectomy, and attitudes toward vasectomy as a means of birth control. The findings suggested that for young married men, firmly committed to childlessness and in agreement with their wives regarding the necessity of the operation, vasectomy appears to be as physically and psychologically safe as in married parents for at least a two-year period. There were differences in the childfree men and fathers in styles of adjustment, with the childfree reporting themselves to be more independent, mobile, and less tied to tradition; these differences were seen as being more related to choosing a childfree life style than to the choice of vasectomy as a contraceptive method.
对44名无子女男性和51名已接受输精管切除术的父亲就其童年背景、婚姻满意度、社会/情感适应情况、归因于输精管切除术的身体和情感问题以及对输精管切除术作为一种节育手段的态度进行了比较。研究结果表明,对于坚决选择不育且与妻子就手术必要性达成一致的年轻已婚男性而言,在至少两年的时间里,输精管切除术在身体和心理上似乎与已育父亲一样安全。无子女男性和父亲在适应方式上存在差异,无子女者称自己更独立、更具流动性,且较少受传统束缚;这些差异被认为更多地与选择无子女的生活方式有关,而非与选择输精管切除术作为避孕方法有关。