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    Home»Health»Study Finds Most Young Women Unhappy & Stressed About Their Sex Lives
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    Study Finds Most Young Women Unhappy & Stressed About Their Sex Lives

    By Monash UniversityFebruary 23, 20204 Comments3 Mins Read
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    Distressed Woman
    According to a new study, over 50% of young Australian women experienced some form of sexually-related personal distress.

    Half of young Australian women experience sexually-related personal distress, with one in five women having at least one female sexual dysfunction (FSD), new research by Monash University shows.

    A study conducted by the Women’s Health Research Program at Monash University has reported, for the first time, an overall picture of the sexual wellbeing of Australian women between the ages of 18 and 39. The findings will be published tomorrow (February 24, 2020) in the international journal, Fertility and Sterility.

    Results showed 50.2 percent of young Australian women experienced some form of sexually-related personal distress. This relates to the degree of feeling guilty, embarrassed, stressed or unhappy about their sex lives.

    A concerning 29.6 percent of women experienced sexually-related personal distress without dysfunction, and 20.6 percent had at least one FSD.

    The most common FSD was low sexual self-image, which caused distress for 11 percent of study participants. Arousal, desire, orgasm and responsiveness dysfunction affected 9 percent, 8 percent, 7.9 percent, and 3.4 percent of the study cohort respectively.

    Sexual self-image dysfunction was associated with being overweight, obese, living together with partner, not married, married and breastfeeding.

    Taking psychotropic medication (such as antidepressants), reported by 20 percent of surveyed women, had the most pervasive impact on sexual function. The use of the combined oral contraceptive pill was not associated with any sexual dysfunction.

    “Sexual wellbeing is recognized as a fundamental human right. It is of great concern that one in five young women have an apparent sexual dysfunction and half of all women within this age group experience sexually-related personal distress,” senior author and Professor of Women’s Health at Monash University, Susan Davis, said.

    “This is a wake-up call to the community and signals the importance of health professionals being open and adequately prepared to discuss young women’s sexual health concerns.”

    The Grollo-Ruzzene Foundation Younger Women’s Health Study, funded by Grollo Ruzzene Foundation, recruited 6986 women aged 18-39 years, living in Victoria, New South Wales and Queensland, to take part in the study.

    All women completed a questionnaire that assessed their sexual wellbeing in terms of desire, arousal, responsiveness, orgasm, and self-image. Participants also evaluated whether they had sexually associated personal distress and provided extensive demographic information.

    Almost one-third of participants described themselves as single, 47 percent had a body mass index within the normal range, and nearly 70 percent had reported being sexually active in the 30 days preceding the study.

    Women who habitually monitored their appearance, and for whom appearance determined their level of physical self-worth, reported being less sexually assertive and more self-conscious during intimacy, and experienced lower sexual satisfaction.

    Professor Davis said if untreated, sexually-related personal distress and FSD could impact relationships and overall quality of life as women aged.

    “The high prevalence of sexually-related personal distress signals the importance of health professionals, particularly those working in the fields of gynecology and fertility, being adequately prepared to routinely ask young women about any sexual health concerns, and to have an appropriate management or referral pathway in place,” Professor Davis said.

    Reference: “The prevalence of sexual dysfunctions and sexually-related distress in young women: a cross-sectional survey” by Ms Jia Zheng, Dr Marina Skiba, Professor Robin Bell, Dr. Rakibul Islam and Professor Susan Davis, 24 February 2020, Fertility and Sterility.
    DOI: 10.1016/j.fertnstert.2019.09.027

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    Gynecology Monash University Public Health
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    4 Comments

    1. Astro Turf on February 23, 2020 9:04 am

      Where are these young ladies? I want to talk to them.

      Reply
    2. Elly on June 21, 2020 11:45 pm

      Great post! Thanks for sharing this. I agree with this but can you please explain what are the other issues men lose interest in relationships?

      Reply
    3. Christina on December 6, 2020 1:32 am

      The nber of sexually related distress is not ignorable, because most of the young men and women are getting worried about their sexual in life. But proper counseling could help to get its of this distress. They could help from VibeThatSpot for any intimate products needed for enhancing their life with their partners. Thanks for sharing this research findings with us.

      Reply
    4. Clyde Spencer on January 1, 2021 4:25 pm

      “Sexual wellbeing is recognized as a fundamental human right.”

      I think that these researchers need to define and justify their definition of what a “right” is. The US Declaration of Independence declares that the pursuit of happiness is an unalienable right. Note that it does not consider happiness itself to be a right. One has to make an effort to achieve desirable goals.

      Reply
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