
@article{ref1,
title="Tokophobia: an unreasoning dread of childbirth. A series of 26 cases",
journal="British journal of psychiatry",
year="2000",
author="Hofberg, K. and Brockington, I.",
volume="176",
number="",
pages="83-85",
abstract="BACKGROUND: Some women dread and avoid childbirth despite desperately wanting a baby. This is called tokophobia. AIMS: To classify tokophobia for the first time in the medical literature. METHOD: Twenty-six women noted to have an unreasoning dread of childbirth were interviewed by the same psychiatrist, who was not the treating doctor. A qualitative analysis of these psychiatric interviews was performed. RESULTS: Phobic avoidance of pregnancy may date from adolescence (primary tokophobia), be secondary to a traumatic delivery (secondary tokophobia) or be a symptom of prenatal depression (tokophobia as a symptom of depression). Pregnant women with tokophobia who were refused their choice of delivery method suffered higher rates of psychological morbidity than those who achieved their desired delivery method. CONCLUSIONS: Tokophobia is a specific and harrowing condition that needs acknowledging. Close liaison between the obstetrician and the psychiatrist in order to assess the balance between surgical and psychiatric morbidity is imperative with tokophobia.<p /><p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0007-1250",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}