Couvade is an involuntary manifestation of pregnancy in men with a partner who is expecting a baby – sometimes called “sympathetic pregnancy”. It isn’t a medically recognised physical or mental disorder, and it isn’t explained by injury or illness.
A range of “pregnancy-related” physical and psychological symptoms include abdominal pain and bloating, back pain, pseudocyesis (euphemistically known as “phantom pregnancy”), lethargy, morning sickness, toothache, food cravings and aversions – many of which were confirmed in a study we carried out at St George’s hospital, in London. Prominent psychological symptoms include ante-natal depression and mood swings, early morning waking, anxiety, poor concentration, distraction and memory loss.
Collectively, these symptoms may signify an empathic identification with a pregnant partner and to the man’s unborn child, but the could also be a resolution of unconscious thoughts that might threaten both.
Couvade symptoms follow a chronological pattern, beginning in the first trimester of pregnancy, before temporarily disappearing in the second and then re-appearing in the final trimester. They can even extend into the period after the baby is born.
While the syndrome primarily occurs in developed countries all over the world, the number of new cases in those countries varies. Several studies have found an incidence of between 25-52% of all men with a pregnant partner in the US; 20% in Sweden, and an estimated 61% in Thailand, though this includes mild to extreme symptoms such as the physical ones above. The incidence in the UK is unknown, but estimates in the 1970s put it between 11%-50%.
A range of theories that have been proposed to explain Couvade syndrome. Along with psychoanalytical and psychosocial explanations, they also include emotional attachment to both the unborn child and partner, and hormonal influences.
Psychoanalysis
A second psychoanalytical theory proposes that expectant fathers may sometimes view the unborn child as a rival for maternal attention. Some have explained this as the expectant father’s interpretation of the unborn baby as a rival from whom attention is diverted. But this is expressed through a more socially acceptable outlet such as the syndrome. This interpretation would suggest that the syndrome has a protective function for the man because it enables him to identify with his pregnant partner and strengthens his protective instincts towards her and the baby.
Psychosocial
Psychosocial theory, which takes in social circumstances, instead
focuses on a marginalisation of men during the woman’s gestation and
childbirth, especially among men who are having their first child. While
motherhood is an important defining feature for women, the same may not
be true for fatherhood and men; expectant women have their maternity
careers endorsed commercially, socially and medically in contrast to the
careers of prospective fathers. Since the 1970s men have become
familiar figures in the delivery room and their attendance is now almost
obligatory.
Transition and crisis
Paternal transitional theory proposes that the transition to
fatherhood is potentially pathological, involving disruptive
interpersonal struggles that are highly stressful.According to Klein the transition from dyad – two tied entities such as man-wife – to a triad – group of three – constitutes one of the most cataclysmic periods for the expectant man. This may be compounded by the fact that men usually accept pregnancy but without any concomitant physical changes that reinforce its reality. They lack the biological markers of the transition to parenthood and these “disembodied” experiences of pregnancy are very different from the woman’s experiences. This in turn causes multiple conflicts during transition, including jealousy and rivalry with the unborn baby, an intensified ambivalence toward their own parents and sexuality conflicts. With all of this going on, it wouldn’t be surprising to see some psychological fallout.
Attachment
Yet paradoxically, men who have had preparation for their parental
role – ante-natal classes, for example – show a higher susceptibility to
being afflicted the syndrome. Attachment theory proposes that the man’s
closeness to the foetus gives rise to the syndrome. In a seminal study
published in 1983, a sample of white middle-class, first-time expectant
men found a modest correlation between more paternal-foetal involvement
and attachment (feeling and hearing the unborn child kicking,
confirmation through the woman’s pregnancy symptoms and the ultrasound
scan) with the incidence of six physical symptoms of the syndrome. These
included feeling more tired (34%), sleeping difficulties (33%),
indigestion (14%), stomach upsets (12%), appetite changes (8%) and
constipation (6%). The investigators concluded men’s symptoms were a
reflection of their level of attachment to the unborn child and
involvement in the pregnancy.
Attack of the hormones
Couvade syndrome also appears to show a relationship with hormones,
but there is a dearth of research investigating such an association. To
date only two studies have supported a hormonal basis for the syndrome, one published in 2000 and another in 2001.
The findings of both indicated a significant increase in men’s levels
of the hormones of prolactin and oestrogen in the first and third
trimesters of pregnancy, but lower levels of testosterone and the stress
hormone cortisol. These hormonal changes were associated with the
display of paternal behaviours as well as Couvade symptoms of fatigue,
appetite changes and weight gain.So a plethora of different theories have offered accounts for the origins of the syndrome. However, some of these, such as the hormonal explanation, have not been investigated sufficiently. And those that have, psychosocial reasons for example, clearly show disparate findings, which weakens a definitive conclusion that the syndrome has roots in this. Suggested directions for future research in the area might focus more hormonal associations with the syndrome.
