AN INVESTIGATION INTO THE PSYCHOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF HYSTERECTOMY
- 1 January 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease
- Vol. 164 (1) , 36-41
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005053-197701000-00007
Abstract
The major aim of the present study was to determine whether women exposed to a hysterectomy procedure showed any greater evidence of postsurgery mood disorder than a cholecystectomy control group. In addition, the investigation also considered whether sterilization by hysterectomy resulted in more frequent mood disturbance than in tubal ligation where the uterus remains undisturbed. Fifty-five hysterectomy patients were compared with 38 cholecystectomy and 60 tubal ligation patients by means of the Profile of Mood States. Presurgery, 6-weeks postsurgery, and 3-months postsurgery measures were obtained. No evidence was found to support the view that the special psychological significance of the uterus results in greater postsurgery mood disturbance than occurs with a control procedure such a cholecystectomy. Neither did the results suggest that sterilization involving organ removal was psychologically more traumatic than where the sterilization procedure left the uterus undisturbed. The two significant group x occasion interactions implied that the groups differed in their pattern of responding to surgery with respect to the Tension-Anxiety and the Fatigue-Inertia variablesThis publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Risk of Admission to Mental Hospital Following Hysterectomy or CholecystectomyAmerican Journal of Public Health and the Nations Health, 1965
- HYSTERECTOMY AND TUBAL LIGATION - A PSYCHIATRIC COMPARISON1965
- Pseudocyesis and Psychiatric Sequelae Of SterilizationArchives of General Psychiatry, 1964
- Papers presented at the ninth annual cancer symposium of the James Ewing Society. The psychological impact of cancer and cancer surgery.VI. Adaptation to hysterectomyCancer, 1956