Abstract
Male infertility, different from female infertility, is characterized by anxiety about sexual adequacy, potency, and manliness. This assault on a man's sense of self revives feelings of competition, castration, and experiences of developmental trauma. In this article we review the literature on male factor infertility and its relationship to psychogenic impotence and to psychological fertility in the larger sense. We also discuss spermatogenesis, sperm donation, and the emotional implications for men of the new reproductive technologies. Finally, we consider the effect on the couple relationship and the value of psychological treatment.
Notes
1Although, since this essay was finalized for publication, interest in the topic of male infertility has burgeoned (in the last year alone some 500 new papers have appeared in the scientific and medical literature), still the psychology of infertile men unfortunately remains underexplored territory.