sexual problems
Range of Sex Problems Stuns Even Researchers
They find more people keep their sexual hang-ups
secret
Associated
Press
CHICAGO -- The lead researcher of a comprehensive sex study
published today said the findings could offer hope to millions of
sexually dysfunctional people, many of
whom think they're the only
ones having trouble in bed.
"Often they don't even admit it to their partners,"
said University of Chicago sociologist Edward Laumann.
"It's the old, 'I've got a headache' instead of 'I
don't feel like having sex.'
"
The study in the Journal of the American Medical Association
shocked even those who did the research. They had expected to find much lower
percentages for sexual dysfunctions -- perhaps 20 percent for each sex.
Instead, the figures were 40 percent for women and 30 percent for
men.
Researchers based their findings on the 1992 National Health and
Social Life Survey, a compilation of interviews with 1,749 women and 1,410 men
aged 18 to 59.
But Dr. Domeena Renshaw, a Chicago-area sex therapist, said the
results should not have surprised researchers, considering the long list of
couples waiting to get into the sexual dysfunction clinic she has run at the
Loyola University Medical Center since 1972.
In that time, she has treated nearly 140 couples who had never
consummated their marriages, including a couple who had been wed for 23 years.
In the today's survey, researchers asked participants if they had
experienced sexual dysfunction over several months in the previous year.
Sexual dysfunction was defined as a regular
lack of interest in or
pain during sex or persistent problems
achieving lubrication, an erection or orgasm.
They found:
* Lack of interest in sex was the most common problem for women,
with about a third saying they regularly didn't want sex. Twenty-six percent
said they regularly didn't have orgasms and 23 percent said sex wasn't
pleasurable.
* About a third of men said they had persistent problems with
climaxing too early, while 14 percent said they had no interest in sex and 8
percent said they consistently derived no pleasure from sex.
* Overall, 43 percent of women and 31 percent of men said they had
one or more persistent problems with sex.
Study co-author Raymond Rosen, co-director of the Center for
Sexual and Marital Health at the Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in New
Brunswick, N.J., said the survey provides much-needed information about women,
who have often been excluded from studies about sexual performance.
He said the findings are the most reliable since Dr. Alfred
Kinsey did his landmark studies 50 years ago.
Too often, Rosen said, Americans have gotten their information
about sex from magazines bought at the grocery-store checkout.
"As a scientist, it makes my hair stand on end," Rosen
said. "It's terrible."
Last updated: 8/05
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