Struggling with fertility problems can be stressful for many women. But that stress does not appear to interfere with infertility treatments,Rift Gold a new study finds.
Research published in the medical journal BMJ finds that stress from infertility or other events does not prevent in vitro fertilization and other fertility treatments from working.
Professor Jacky Boivin from the U.K.-based Cardiff Fertility Studies Research Group and colleagues investigated links between the success of fertility treatment and stress by examining 14 studies involving 3,RIFT Platinum583 infertile women undergoing a cycle of fertility treatments.
The women were assessed before fertility treatment for anxiety and stress. Boivin and colleagues then compared data for women who got pregnant and women who did not.
rift goldThe results show that emotional distress was not associated with whether or not a woman became pregnant.
"These findings should reassure women that emotional distress caused by fertility problems or other life events co-occurring with treatment will not compromise their chance of becoming pregnant," Boivin said in a statement.
About one-third of couples trying to get pregnant stop treatments early because of the stress involved in treatment.RIFT Platinum Many women wrongly blame themselves for their inability to get pregnant, Boivin told BBC.
"Women having fertility treatment who do not get pregnant early on often blame themselves for getting too stressed out and the longer they remain not pregnant the more stressed they get," she said. TERA Gold"This just reinforces the myth."
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