Abstract:
Azoospermia is one of the social problems affecting families/countries today in the
whole world, which has resulted in an involuntary declining birth rate [1]. Worldwide, more than 70 million couples suffer from infertility, and it is estimated that azoospermia is found in up to 10 to 20 percent of the men who present to an infertility clinic [2]. Uganda is among the countries where male infertility is assumed to be a big challenge, with an estimated 5,000,000 people facinginfertility, where 10 to 15% of the couples are unable to have children. Hence the current study aimed at establishing the risk factors associated with azoospermia among patients attending Ebenezer Clinical Laboratory, Kampala, Uganda