
Doctor Malpani has also written a book called
"How to Get the Best Medical Care - For Less".
click here.
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Chapter 1 Do you have an infertility problem ? When to Start Worrying! Chapter 2 How Babies are Made - The Basics Chapter 3 Finding Out What’s Wrong -- The Basic Medical Tests Chapter 4 Testing the Man - Semen Analysis. Chapter 5 Beyond the Semen Analysis Chapter 6 Diagnosis and Treatment for Male Infertility -- More Confusion ! Chapter 7 The Case of the Man with a Low Sperm Count. Chapter 8 Microinjection: The Latest Advance in Treating the Infertile Man. Chapter 9 Ultrasound - Seeing with Sound. Chapter 10 Laparoscopy -- The Kinder Cut Chapter 11 Hysteroscopy Chapter 12 The Tubal Connection Chapter 13 Ovulation -- Normal and Abnormal Chapter 14 The Older Woman Chapter 15 Polycystic Ovarian Disease (PCOD) Chapter 16 The Cervical Factor Chapter 17 Hirsutism -- Excess Facial and Body Hair Chapter 18 Endometriosis -- The Silent Invader Chapter 19 Ectopic Pregnancy – The Time Bomb in the Tube Chapter 20 Unexplained Infertility Chapter 21 Secondary Infertility -- Caught Between Fertile And Infertile Worlds Chapter 22 Empty Arms -- The Lonely Trauma of Miscarriage Chapter 23 Understanding Your Medicines Chapter 24 Intrauterine Insemination Chapter 25 Test Tube Babies - IVF & GIFT Chapter 26 PREIMPLANTATION GENETIC DIAGNOSIS - the newest ART Chapter 27 Using Donor Sperm Chapter 28 Surrogate Mothering Chapter 29 When Enough is Enough - The Decision to End Treatment Chapter 30 Adoption - Yours by Choice Chapter 31 Childfree living - Life without children Chapter 32 Stress And Infertility Chapter 33 The Emotional Crisis of Infertility Chapter 34 How to Cope with Infertility Chapter 35 Infertility and Sexuality Chapter 36 Support Groups-Self-Help is the Best Help Chapter 37 Myths and Misconceptions Chapter 38 Helping Hands - How Friends and Relatives can Help Chapter 39 RIGHTS OF THE INFERTILE COUPLE - AND WHAT SOCIETY NEEDS TO DO ABOUT THEM Chapter 40 Alternative Medicine: Exploring Your Treatment Options Chapter 41 Making Decisions about Treatment Chapter 42 How to Find the Best Doctor Chapter 43 How to Make the Most of Your Doctor Chapter 44 Let the reader beware - making sense of medical stories in the news Chapter 45 THE INFERTILE PATIENT'S GUIDE TO THE INTERNET Chapter 46 The Ethical Issues - Right or Wrong ? Chapter 47 How Much Does Treatment Cost? Chapter 48 Pregnant - At Last ! Chapter 49 Preventing Infertility Chapter 50 The Infertile Patient's Prayer and Infertility "Defined" Chapter 51 Making IVF affordable Chapter 52 Why are women scared of IVF ? Chapter 53 INFERTILITY RECORD SHEET Chapter 54 Self-Insemination |
The Emotional Crisis of Infertility Sir William Osler , a famous physician , once said that human beings have two basic desires - to get and to beget. To have your own family is a universal dream . This dream can become a nightmare for the infertile couple and learning that you have an infertility problem can cause painful and difficult emotions. Infertility is like a chronic illness that uses up a large amount of a couples' resources - emotional and financial - and involves the expenditure of a considerable amount of time, money, physical and emotional energy. Everyone's response to infertility is different depending on individual situations, emotional strengths, coping methods and personality. You will be confronted with the emotional impact of infertility before, during, and after treatment. It is better to prepare yourself for these difficult periods, so that with emotional support and mental preparation, you can successfully reduce the potential pain of infertility. Discovering that you have an infertility problem Although you may have friends who have experienced infertility and you're aware that it is a common disorder, the news is almost always unexpected. As you examine the issues surrounding infertility, you may find yourself experiencing some uncomfortable emotions. Some of the most common ones are : Shock: In most cases, infertility is not diagnosed until after one year of unsuccessfully trying to conceive. Because of this, you may suspect that you have a problem before finding out for sure. For many couples, infertility is very difficult to accept. Most couples initially respond with feelings of shock and disbelief. After planning for years to have a child "one day" , you may feel that your life's plan has been put on hold. These feelings generally only last a short while and are not emotionally harmful when you recognize and address them. Denial: Another part of the emotional process is often denial. You and your partner may find yourselves saying "it can't be happening to us," and rather than confronting infertility, you may choose to deny the problem. However, this phase serves an important purpose and allows you to adjust to an overwhelming situation at your own pace as you work at resolving your infertility. Denial is only unhealthy if it lasts for a prolonged period and prevents you from accepting the reality of infertility. Fantasizing: For some women, denial also leads to fantasizing - and they dream of what life would be like with a child. They feel that all their problems would be solved if they got pregnant . They lose touch with reality and everytime they start treatment, they think they are going to conceive . They find it difficult to cope when it fails. Guilt: Guilt is an unfortunate but common response to infertility. In an attempt to determine why you are infertile, you may wonder if past behavior caused the problem. Some individuals may feel that they are being punished for past sexual activities or an elective abortion. Often infertile partners may feel that they are depriving fertile partners of the opportunity to have children. The inability to produce a baby may also make you feel you have let your family down because you have not been able to fulfill what is expected of you - especially so if you (or your husband) are the only son or daughter of your parents. In large joint families, this stress can be stifling - and fertile daughters-in-law are given special privileges from which infertile women are excluded. Bargaining: This is a common response - especially if you believe in God. You promise to fast ; offer penance ; offer money; and to be good for the rest of your life if He gives you a pregnancy. Many infertile patients have visited an endless number of temples and "holy men" - and done "yagnas" and "tapasya" - in order to conceive, often at considerable expense. Blame: You may blame one another for your inability to conceive, especially when only one member is infertile. Also, you may respond differently to the emotional aspects of infertility. For example, one of you may find that the other is less concerned about having a child. As a result of these differences, one partner may grow resentful because the other is not experiencing the same emotions on an equal level. Sadness and Depression: The number of losses associated with infertility makes depression a very common response. In addition to the loss of a baby, infertility represents the loss of fulfilling a dream and the loss of a relationship that you might have had with a child. What you are mourning for is the absence of experience - and this type of sadness can be especially hard to deal with. You and your partner may have even more difficulty dealing with these losses because friends and family often underestimate the emotional impact of infertility - and you have no one to talk to . The nature of infertility is such that you may never know definitely whether you are able to conceive or what is causing the problem. Your grief therefore has nothing to focus on - and there is the continual hope that "this will be the time" which can leave your emotions painfully suspended, creating a continual "hoping against hope" attitude. When someone dies, the death brings family and friends together to grieve the loss - and this helps in healing . In contrast, infertility is a very private form of grief - you grieve alone without social support because the loss is hidden. Hopelessness: Hopelessness is related to depression and usually results from the up and down cycle of emotions produced by infertility and its treatment. Most likely, you'll feel hopeful during mid-cycle when you've been treated and are looking to success. But if the cycle is unsuccessful, hopelessness can occur, and you may feel that you'll never become pregnant. Starting over again each month can make dealing with infertility especially tough. After the disappointment of several unsuccessful cycles, you may find it difficult to maintain a positive attitude. You may think that it gets easier with time - but it never does - and every time it fails, old wounds ( which you hoped had healed ) open again. After all, every time you start a treatment ( especially when it is a new type of therapy you have never tried before; or treatment with a new doctor), you always do it with the hope that "this" time it's going to work for you. If you didn't have this hope, no matter how small, no one would ever start treatment at all! Loss of Control: You and your partner have probably planned your lives so that you'll begin a family at the most favorable time. Many of us think everything is possible if we work hard enough - and not being able to have a baby is often the first time you experience failure against forces at work which are beyond your control , no matter how hard you try. You may have practiced birth control for years and waited until your careers were established before trying to have a baby. Discovering that you are infertile removes these feelings of control over your own life. During treatment, you may find yourself putting other parts of your lives on hold. This might include postponing moving to a new home, continuing your education, changing jobs, or establishing new relationships. The more you give up, the less in control you're likely to feel. Each treatment cycle can become a roller coaster of emotions with its ups and downs - the hopes of success and the frustration of failure Anger: Anger arises from having to confront a great deal of stress and many losses, including the loss of control. It is not unusual to resent pregnant women, and friends and family who do not seem to understand the emotional tension associated with infertility. Often the anger is directed towards doctors - and this is one of the reasons why so many infertile patients change doctors so frequently. Isolation: Feeling alone is a common experience among infertile couples and coping even more difficult. Most people cannot comprehend and complex feelings associated with infertility. Insensitive remarks, such as "relax and you'll get pregnant," or "after you adopt you'll have a child of your own," are not based on fact and can cause a great deal of pain. It is not unusual for relationships to change if friends and family are unable to understand and empathize with your feelings. Let your friends know that what you need is not their advice, but their support. Infertility is an experience that continually fluctuates in intensity and direction, so that at different times you may have different needs and experience different emotions. There are no set "stages" in this experience, and, while, at one time, your emotions can be mystifying and frighteningly intense, at another time, you may simply feel numb. There may be moments when the fact of being infertile dictates every facet of your life. The way you learn to deal with the experience of infertility will also be different at different times. One day a particular strategy may help you a lot, but later on you may find it useless. At times you may find that the pain you experience is very destructive, but at others you may find it a useful motivating force in your life. It is important to acknowledge that emotional responses to infertility vary greatly, as do different people's methods of coping with them. Each person has to find his or her own way of coping with the infertility situation, and sometimes might need help to accomplish this.
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