Fertility awareness in women attending a fertility clinic

The Australian & New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, 37(3), 350-352

DOI 10.1111/j.1479-828x.1997.tb02429.x PMID 9325525

Abstract

Eighty women attending for consultation at a tertiary referral fertility unit over a 3-month period were surveyed for their knowledge of fertility awareness and how they used this information to enhance their chances of conception. It was hypothesized that less than 50% of the subjects had an adequate understanding of when the fertile time occurred in their menstrual cycle. A questionnaire was completed anonymously by each subject and these were scored in 3 categories for fertility awareness by 2 independent Natural Family Planning teachers. Scores ranged from 0 for women who had no concept of fertility awareness, to 6 for women who were highly aware. The results showed that 26% (N = 21) of subjects had a score of 4 or greater which was considered as having an adequate understanding. The hypothesis was accepted, giving reason for concern about the effectiveness of consumer education at all levels of fertility investigation.

Topics

fertility awareness knowledge women attending fertility clinic, fertile window understanding infertility patients survey, natural family planning teachers fertility awareness scoring, consumer education fertility awareness conception timing, Blake fertility awareness tertiary referral unit survey, fertility clinic patients knowledge of fertile time menstrual cycle, inadequate fertility awareness infertility investigation, fertility education gap women trying to conceive, ovulation timing knowledge infertile women questionnaire, fertility literacy assessment conception optimization
PMID 9325525 9325525 DOI 10.1111/j.1479-828x.1997.tb02429.x 10.1111/j.1479-828x.1997.tb02429.x

Cite this article

Blake, D., Smith, D., Bargiacchi, A., France, M., & Gudex, G. (1997). Fertility awareness in women attending a fertility clinic. *The Australian & New Zealand journal of obstetrics & gynaecology*, *37*(3), 350-352. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1479-828x.1997.tb02429.x

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