Psychological Factors and the
Sexuality of Pregnant and Postpartum Women
continued
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At 6 months after childbirth, women continued to report significantly
decreased sexual desire, frequency of intercourse, and sexual
satisfaction compared to their levels prior to conception satisfaction (Fischman
et al., 1986; Pertot, 1981). The most marked reduction was in level of
sexual desire.
By the time babies are 6 months old, their presence and aspects of
women's mother role have a considerable impact on the sex lives of their
parents. Many women have greater difficulty with the mother role at 6 months
postpartum than at 12 weeks postpartum, due to their infants' more difficult
behaviors (Koester, 1991; Mercer, 1985). Babies are well into the process of
attachment, usually preferring to be cared for by their mothers; most can
move around by crawling or sliding, and need considerable attention. In the
cross-sectional analyses, mother-role quality was the strongest predictor of
each of the sexual measures. Women with higher mother-role quality also had
higher relationship satisfaction and less depression and fatigue at 6 months
postpartum. This is consistent with research which has shown various
associations between mother-role quality, infant difficulty, lower marital
satisfaction, fatigue, and postnatal depression (Belsky & Rovine, 1990;
Milligan, Lenz, Parks, Pugh & Kitzman, 1996). It may be that by 6 months
postpartum the interaction between infant temperament and the parental
relationship has been amplified.
Depression appeared to exert an unexpected positive influence on women's
sexual desire at 6 months postpartum. These findings differ from those of
Hyde et al. (1998), who found that depression was a highly significant
predictor of loss of sexual desire of employed women at 4 months postpartum.
This discrepancy may be due to problems with the sample in this wave of our
study. The low rate of postnatal depression suggests a lower response rate
in this study from women who may have become depressed after childbirth. The
distribution of sexual desire by depression scores at 6 months postpartum
was unusual, in that there was a cluster of women who were very low in both
depression and sexual desire, and this cluster may have unduly influenced
results for the sample as a whole.
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Dyspareunia: Pain
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Dyspareunia continued to have a strong influence on women's sexuality at
6 months postpartum, although the average level of dyspareunia at the later
period was less than at 3 months earlier. It is possible that by this stage
the expectation of pain with sexual intercourse for some women may have
started a cycle in which they become less aroused sexually, which
perpetuates vaginal dryness and discomfort with intercourse. Although
dyspareunia may commence as a physical factor, it may be maintained by
psychological factors. This relationship needs to be explored further in
future research.
A major limitation of the current study is that only women were surveyed,
and not their partners. An additional limitation is that before-conception
measures required retrospective recall, and that prepregnancy and pregnancy
measures were collected at the same time. It would have been preferable to
take baseline measures earlier in the pregnancy. Ideally, baseline measures
would be taken before conception. Further there was some attrition in
participants throughout the study (25% between time 1 and time 2, and a
further 26% between time 2 and time 3). This may have limited the
generalizability of the findings.
In addition, the sample in the current study appeared to be biased to
better educated women of higher professional status, like samples in many
previous studies (e.g., Bustan et al., 1996; Glazener, 1997; Pertot, 1981).
This is a problem which is not easily overcome, although multidisciplinary
collaboration between gynaecological and mental health professionals may
assist (Sydow, 1999).
The findings from the current study have important implications for the
well-being of women, their partners, and the family. It is clear that a
range of factors influence sexual responses during pregnancy and postpartum,
and that these factors vary at different stages of the process of adjusting
to childbirth. Fatigue is a constant factor influencing sexual responses
during pregnancy and at 12 weeks and 6 months postpartum. Other variables
assume significance at different stages of the pregnancy and postpartum
periods. Providing couples with information about what sexual changes they
may expect, the duration of those changes, and the possible influences on
those changes, may help couples avoid making unfounded harmful assumptions
about their relationship.
Last reviewed: 11/05
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