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Journal of Family Issues
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Infertility and Life Satisfaction Among Women

Julia McQuillan

University of Nebraska - Lincoln

Rosalie A. Torres Stone

University of Nebraska - Lincoln

Arthur L. Greil

Alfred University, New York

Using data from a random sample of 580 midwestern women, the authors explore the association between lifetime infertility and life satisfaction. Past research shows lower life satisfaction among those seeking help for infertility. The authors find no direct effects of lifetime infertility, regardless of perception of a problem, on life satisfaction; however, there are several conditional effects. Among women who have ever met the criteria for infertility and perceive a fertility problem, life satisfaction is significantly lower for nonmothers and those with higher internal medical locus of control, and the association is weaker for employed women. For women with infertility who do not perceive a problem, motherhood is associated with higher life satisfaction compared to women with no history of infertility.

Key Words: infertility • internal medical locus of control • life satisfaction • life course • motherhood

Journal of Family Issues, Vol. 28, No. 7, 955-981 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/0192513X07300710


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