OBJECTIVE: To assess the relationship between psychiatric disorders and infertility.
DESIGN: Case-control study.
SETTING: Fertile and infertile volunteer couples in an academic research setting.
PATIENT(S): Eighty-one infertile couples recruited from an infertility center before fertility treatment and 70 fertile controls recruited from an obstetrics and gynecology clinic.
INTERVENTION(S): None.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): The presence of Axis 1 psychiatric disorders.
RESULT(S): The occurrence of current psychiatric disorders was significantly higher among infertile subjects than among fertile controls, especially for adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood (16% vs. 2%) and for binge eating disorder (8% vs. 0).
CONCLUSION(S): Our data highlight that a percentage of infertile patients have already developed a psychiatric disorder at the time of their first contact with a specialized fertility service. Possible applications are discussed, including the recommendation that gynecologists screen for clinical or subclinical psychiatric disorders in infertility patients and offer treatment accordingl
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