Title of article :
Association between Coping Strategies and Infertility Stress among a Group of Women with Fertility Problem in Shiraz, Iran
Author/Authors :
Aflakseir, Abdulaziz Department of Clinical Psychology - School of Education & Psychology - Shiraz University, Shiraz, Iran , Zarei, Masoumeh Department of Clinical Psychology - School of Education & Psychology - Shiraz University, Shiraz, Iran
Abstract :
Background: Studies have shown that individuals with fertility problems experience
psychosocial problems. The use of various coping strategies seems to have different
impacts on women with infertility stress. The aim of this study was to examine the
role of coping strategies (active-avoidance, passive-avoidance, active confronting
and meaning based) in predicting infertility stress among a group of women seeking
infertility treatment in Shiraz.
Methods: One hundred twenty infertile women were recruited from several infertility
clinics in Shiraz using convenience sampling method. The participants completed
research measures including the Infertility Problem Stress Inventory and the Ways of
Coping Scale (passive-avoidance, active-avoidance, active-confronting, meaningbased).
Multiple regression analysis was used for data analysis. A p-value less than
0.05 was considered as statistically significant.
Results: The findings showed that participants had the highest scores on passiveavoidance
coping strategies followed by meaning-based coping, active-confronting
coping and active-avoidance coping. The findings also indicated that women who
utilized more active-avoidance coping strategies reported less infertility stress. Furthermore,
the results of regression analysis demonstrated that two coping strategies
including active-avoidance (β=0.35, p<0.001) and meaning-based coping (β=-0.50,
p<0.001) predicted infertility stress significantly. Moreover, meaning-based coping
strategy was the strongest predictor of low infertility stress.
Conclusion: The present study showed that the majority of infertile women used
passive-avoidance coping strategy. Furthermore, those who perceived their infertility
problem as meaningful had a low infertility stress, while those who used activeavoidance
coping strategies had high infertility stress.
Keywords :
Coping skills , Female , Fertility , Infertility , Psychological , Stress
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics