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Involuntary Childlessness and Stress Management

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Infertility
Interventions
Behavioral: Expressive writing
Behavioral: Active ctrl
Registration Number
NCT01187095
Lead Sponsor
University of Aarhus
Brief Summary

Many couples experience involuntary childlessness and seek treatment at fertility clinics. Going through treatment procedures can be very challenging, time consuming and emotionally demanding.

Psychosocial intervention might have a soothing and healing effect on both behavior as well on physical matters. Hence, the investigators would like to investigate whether Expressive Writing Intervention (EWI) has an effect on stress management as well as on the pregnancy rate for couples who are going through fertility treatment.

Detailed Description

Background:

Around 10-14 % of all couples are experiencing involuntary childlessness. Most of these couples will be referred to the public health clinics in order to receive help by means of fertility treatment e.g. in vitro fertility (IVF) and numbers from the National board of Health indicates that the number is rising. It is well known that involuntary childlessness pose an enduring psychosocial burden and strain with feelings of hopelessness, despair, anger and frustration as well as anxiety and sadness. Much research points out that couples that receive IVF treatment to a great extent often experience stress and strong emotional oscillations during the treatment procedures. Some studies indicate that negative feelings as described above might have a negative impact on the chances of becoming pregnant. In spite of these findings there are only conducted very few controlled studies of intervention with this patient group, which might explain why it is still unclear whether infertile couples can benefit from therapeutic intervention.

A growing number of studies in the area of health psychology has suggested that interventions where the participants has the opportunity to express themselves in writing about feelings, so-called Expressive Writing Intervention (EWI) seem to have a positive effect on physical health as well as mental well-being.

Methods:

Couples starting with their IVF treatment at the Fertility Clinic, Skejby Hospital will be invited to participate in the research project. Approximately 400 couples are expected to begin treatment during a one year period (We would like to enrol at least 144 couples). They will be randomized into a EWI group (writing about fertility related topics - emotional disclosure) and a control group (writing about neutral topics non-emotional disclosure).

Inclusion criteria:

* Heterosexual couples as well as Homosexual couples

* 1st, 2nd and 3rd treatment cycles

* Can read and understand Danish

* Aged 18-40 years

Exclusion criteria:

• Patients with genetic diseases (PGD patients)

The investigators would like to know more about whether EWI has an effect on:

1. The extent of psychosocial strain - does change happen in life satisfaction, emotional state and reactions, as well as with thoughts about childlessness and treatment.

2. The result of the IVF treatment (pregnancy/non pregnancy)

3. The adaptation to the (negative) treatment outcome - the impact of having participated in an EWI intervention group.

Furthermore mediators and moderators will be explored.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
298
Inclusion Criteria
  • heterosexual couples lesbian couples
Exclusion Criteria
  • couples; where one of them suffers from a genetic disease

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
counsellingExpressive writingDoes couples in IVF treatment benefit from emotional disclosure
ControlActive ctrlNeutral writing exercise
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
The Effect of Expressive Writing Intervention on Fertility Related Stressfollow-up 2 (3 months)

The COMPI 14-item self-rating instrument has been developed to capture specific thoughts and feelings in relation to involuntarily childlessness, which may lead to distress on 4-point and 5-point Likert scales. Responses cover personal, social, and marital domains with total scores ranging between 14 - 38, and higher scores indicating higher levels of infertility-related distress. Internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha) in the present study was 0.89 and the baseline to post-intervention test-retest correlation was 0.84. For the sub-domains the reliability of the scales were as follows; personal domain α=0.86, social domain α=0.83 and marital domain α=0.73.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Pregnancy Ratemeasured at follow-up (t3) 3 months

How many women achieved pregnancy in each arm

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Department of Psychology, Aarhus University

🇩🇰

Aarhus, Jylland, Denmark

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