Trials / Unknown
UnknownNCT05579756
Psychatric Impact of Miscarriage in Assiut University Hospital
Psychatric Impact of Miscarriage and Its Associated Factors Among Women in Assiut University Women's Health Hospital
- Status
- Unknown
- Phase
- —
- Study type
- Observational
- Enrollment
- 170 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- Assiut University · Academic / Other
- Sex
- Female
- Age
- 18 Years – 45 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- —
Summary
Miscarriage is basically defined as intrauterine fetal death before viability (1,2). Age of viability, in Egypt, sets at 26 weeks of gestation (3). Incidence of miscarriage is often referred to as an iceberg where the actual size of the problem cannot be determined. More than 50% of human conceptions are lost before the missed period either before or after implantation (4). In clinically recognized pregnancies, losses decrease as pregnancy progresses from 17% - 20 % after 6 weeks to only 3% at 10 weeks gestation (4). Beside the high incidence of miscarriage, it implies a high psychological morbidity to both partners with increased liability to anxiety, post stress disorder and depression(5,6). This psychological impact can be attributed not only to loss of desired child but also to the traumatic event of bleeding and pain encountered by those patients (7).
Detailed description
Miscarriage is basically defined as intrauterine fetal death before viability (1,2). Age of viability, in Egypt, sets at 26 weeks of gestation (3). Incidence of miscarriage is often referred to as an iceberg where the actual size of the problem cannot be determined. More than 50% of human conceptions are lost before the missed period either before or after implantation (4). In clinically recognized pregnancies, losses decrease as pregnancy progresses from 17% - 20 % after 6 weeks to only 3% at 10 weeks gestation (4). Beside the high incidence of miscarriage, it implies a high psychological morbidity to both partners with increased liability to anxiety, post stress disorder and depression(5,6). This psychological impact can be attributed not only to loss of desired child but also to the traumatic event of bleeding and pain encountered by those patients (7). While the clinical management of miscarriage and its physical complications have been extensively discussed; the psychological impact of this traumatic event of loss is usually overlooked especially in developing countries (8-11). Moreover, there are behind-the-scene factors that trigger or correlate to the development of psychiatric morbidities following miscarriage (12,13). Factors as sociodemographic, marital satisfaction, social support, individual's coping resources, history of infertility and previous miscarriage vary across different population samples, also vary in their influence on women's psychological resilience after traumatic events as miscarriage. No previous studies addressed this topic in Egyptian population.
Conditions
Timeline
- Start date
- 2022-10-01
- Primary completion
- 2023-03-01
- Completion
- 2023-03-01
- First posted
- 2022-10-14
- Last updated
- 2022-10-14
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05579756. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.