The Relationship Between Mode of Delivery and Sexual Health Outcomes after Childbirth

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36
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article
Data de publicação
2015
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WILEY-BLACKWELL
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JOURNAL OF SEXUAL MEDICINE, v.12, n.5, p.1212-1220, 2015
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IntroductionSeveral factors are implicated in the women's sexuality after childbirth. Nevertheless, there is conflicting evidence about the influence of mode of delivery (MD) AimTo prospectively evaluate the relationship between MD and sexual health outcomes after childbirth MethodsA prospective cohort study conducted between May 2005 and March 2007 included 831 pregnant women recruited from primary care clinics of the public sector in SAo Paulo, Brazil. The exposure variable was MD: uncomplicated vaginal delivery (spontaneous vaginal delivery without episiotomy or any kind of perineal laceration); complicated vaginal delivery (either forceps or normal, with episiotomy or any kind of perineal laceration) and cesarean delivery. Socio-demographic and obstetric data were obtained through a questionnaire applied during the antenatal and postnatal period. Crude and adjusted risk ratios, with 95% confidence intervals, were calculated using Poisson regression to examine the associations between MD and sexual health outcomes. Main Outcome MeasuresThe three main sexual health outcomes were later resumption of sexual life, self-perception of decline of sexual life (DSL), and presence of sexual desire. ResultsOne hundred and forty-one women (21.9%) resumed sexual life 3 or more months after delivery. Although 87.1% of women had desire, DSL occurred in 21.1% of the cohort. No associations were found between MD and sexual health outcomes. ConclusionsWomen's sexuality after childbirth were not influenced by the type of delivery. Efforts to improve the treatment of sexual problems after childbirth should focus beyond MD. Faisal-Cury A, Menezes PR, Quayle J, Matijasevich A, and Diniz SG. The relationship between mode of delivery and sexual health outcomes after childbirth. J Sex Med 2015;12:1212-1220.
Palavras-chave
Mode of Delivery, Sexual Functioning, Childbirth, Postpartum Depression
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