maryam maadi; Abbas Abolghasemi; mosa kafie; seyedeh Hajar Sharami
Abstract
Objective: Pelvic inflammatory disease is a chronic disease and a common infection in women which is associated with significant complications. This study aimed to compare cognitive abilities and personality traits in infertile women with and without pelvic inflammatory disease.
Method: The research ...
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Objective: Pelvic inflammatory disease is a chronic disease and a common infection in women which is associated with significant complications. This study aimed to compare cognitive abilities and personality traits in infertile women with and without pelvic inflammatory disease.
Method: The research method was causal-comparative and the sample of research included 48 infertile women with pelvic inflammatory disease and 57 infertile women without the pelvic inflammatory disease, who were referred to Al-Zahra Hospital in Rasht in 2021 and were selected through the convenience sampling method. The research instruments were a demographic checklist, the Cognitive Ability Questionnaire (Nejati, 2013), and the Neo Personality Questionnaire (McCrae & Costa, 1985). Research data were analyzed using the Mann-whitney test and multivariate variance analysis.
Results: The results showed that there was no difference between infertile women with and without pelvic inflammatory disease in cognitive abilities and personality traits (p >0.05). But there was a significant difference between four of the seven components of cognitive ability (memory; P<0.05, U= 899.00, inhibitory control and selective attention; P<0.05, U= 933.00, decision-making; P<0.05, U= 863.500, and sustained attention; P<0.05, U= 924.500), the total score of the cognitive ability variable (P<0.05, U= 815.000), and openness in both upper and lower levels of education (P <0.05, U= 907.50).
Conclusion: Infertility with causes of inflammatory and non-inflammatory did not lead to cognitive dysfunction and differences in personality traits but education as a potentially influential variable can play a crucial role, which needs further research.
maryam maadi; Abbas Abolghasemi; mosa kafie; seyedeh Hajar Sharami
Abstract
Objective: Pelvic inflammatory disease is a common infection that can reduce family functioning by causing longterm complications such as chronic pelvic pain and infertility. This study aimed to comparefamily functions in Infertile women with and without pelvic inflammatory disease.Method: The research ...
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Objective: Pelvic inflammatory disease is a common infection that can reduce family functioning by causing longterm complications such as chronic pelvic pain and infertility. This study aimed to comparefamily functions in Infertile women with and without pelvic inflammatory disease.Method: The research method was causal-comparative, and the participants included 48 infertile women with pelvicinflammatory disease and 57 infertile women without pelvic inflammatory disease, referred to Al-Zahra Hospitalin Rasht in 2021. Based on the patients’ records and the diagnosis of the gynecologist, infertile women with pelvicinflammatory disease (tubular factor) and infertile women without pelvic inflammatory disease (due to other causes)were selected purposefully. A demographic checklist and McMaster Family Functioning Questionnaire were used tocollect data. Research data were analyzed using one-way and multivariate variance analysis.Results: The results showed that there was a significant difference between the mean scores of emotional fusion ininfertile women with pelvic inflammatory disease and infertile women without pelvic inflammatory disease (P <0.05). In addition, there was a significant difference in the two levels of high and low education in emotional controland response and interaction between group and education components (P < 0.05).Conclusion: According to the results of this study and the importance of the emotional integration component inwomen with infertility without pelvic inflammatory disease, this component can be used as a strength in these womenfor more effective communication in married life and to reduce the negative effects of infertility and education shouldbe further examined as a possible influential variable.