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Title: Quality of life of immigrant and non-immigrant infertile patients in a publicly funded in vitro fertilisation program: a cross-sectional study. Author: Hasson J, Tulandi T, Shavit T, Shaulov T, Seccareccia E, Takefman J. Journal: BJOG; 2017 Nov; 124(12):1841-1847. PubMed ID: 28444970. Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether there are differences in fertility quality of life (FertiQoL) and socio-demographic characteristics between immigrants and non-immigrant patients attending a government-funded fertility program. DESIGN: Cross-sectional study. SETTING: McGill University Reproductive Center in Montreal, Canada, at a time when governmental funding for in vitro fertilisation (IVF) was provided to all residents. POPULATION: All infertile patients, males and females, attending the center between March and July 2015. METHODS: Patients were invited to complete anonymous questionnaires which included socio-demographic items and the validated FertiQoL questionnaire. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Socio-demographic characteristics (age, gender, marital state, infertility type & duration, previous IVF attempts; education, employment, income, ethnicity, spoken languages) and FertiQoL scores. RESULTS: In all, 1020 patients completed the questionnaires; of these, 752 (77.7%) non-immigrant Canadian citizens and 215 (22.3%) resident immigrants were included in the analysis. Median duration in Canada for immigrants was 4 years. Immigrants were more likely to have university/graduate degrees (75% versus 64%), to be unemployed (37% versus 13.1%) and to have lower annual household incomes (72.8% versus 39.5%, all P < 0.05). They also reported poorer QoL and achieved significantly lower scores in the emotional, mind/body, social, treatment and total FertiQoL domains. Multivariate analysis showed male gender, lower education level and Caucasian/European ethnicity to be significantly associated with higher QoL. CONCLUSIONS: Despite governmental funding of IVF, immigrants experience reduced fertility QoL, implying cost is not the only barrier to IVF use. The reduced QoL may stem from cross-cultural differences in infertility perception. This population may be at greater risk for depression and anxiety and should be flagged accordingly. TWEETABLE ABSTRACT: Immigrants' fertility QoL is lower despite publicly funded IVF implying cost is not the only barrier to IVF use.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]