An
unprecedented study of sex and seniors finds that many older people are
surprisingly frisky — willing to do, and talk about, intimate acts that
would make their grandchildren blush.
That may be too much information for some folks.
But it comes from the
most comprehensive sex survey ever done among 57- to 85-year-olds in the
United States. Sex and interest in it do fall off when people are in
their 70s, but more than a quarter of those up to age 85 reported having
sex in the previous year.
And the drop-off has a lot to do with health or lack of a partner, especially for women, the survey found.
The federally funded
study, done by respected scientists and published in Thursday’s New
England Journal of Medicine, overturns some stereotypical notions that
physical pleasure is just a young person’s game.
“Most people assume that
people stop doing it after some vague age,” said sex researcher Edward
Laumann of the University of Chicago.
However, more than half of those aged 57 to 75 said they gave or received oral sex, as did about a third of 75- to 85-year-olds.
‘Bravo’ says Dr. Ruth“Bravo
that the New England Journal of Medicine is publishing something like
that. It’s about time,” said Ruth Westheimer, better known as sexpert
Dr. Ruth, who has long counseled seniors on sex.
The survey involved
two-hour face-to-face interviews with 3,005 men and women around the
country. Researchers also took blood, saliva and other samples that will
tell about hormone levels, sex-related infections and other health
issues in future reports. They even tested how well seniors could see,
taste, hear and smell — things that affect being able to have and enjoy
sex.
Some results:
- Sex with a partner in the previous year was reported by 73 percent of people ages 57 to 64; 53 percent of those ages 64 to 75, and 26 percent of people 75 to 85. Of those who were active, most said they did it two to three times a month or more.
- Women at all ages were less likely to be sexually active than men. But they also lacked partners; far more were widowed.
- People whose health was excellent or very good were nearly twice as likely to be sexually active as those in poor or fair health.
- Half of people having sex reported at least one related problem. Most common in men was erection trouble (37 percent); in women, low desire (43 percent), vaginal dryness (39 percent) and inability to have an orgasm (34 percent).
- One out of seven men used Viagra or other substances to improve sex.
- Only 22 percent of women and 38 percent of men had discussed sex with a doctor since age 50.
Why
do this research? Sex is an important indicator of health, said
Georgeanne Patmios of the National Institute on Aging, the study’s main
funder.
Sexual problems can be a
warning sign of diabetes, infections, cancer or other health woes.
Untreated sex issues can lead to depression and social withdrawal, and
people may even stop taking needed medications because of sexual side
effects, the researchers wrote.
Some of them did a
landmark study of sexual habits in younger people a decade ago, but
little is known about X-rated behaviors beyond Generation X.
“This subject has been
taboo for so long that many older people haven’t even talked to their
spouses about their sexual problems, let alone a physician,” said the
lead author, Dr. Stacy Tesser Lindau, a University of Chicago
gynecologist.
Many doctors are
embarrassed to bring it up, and some may not know how to treat sexual
dysfunction, said Dr. Alison Moore, a geriatrics specialist at the
University of California, Los Angeles, who had no role in the study.
‘Lost in the shuffle’“Even
among geriatricians, there can be an age bias that this is not as big a
deal as some of the other things they come into us for,” like heart
problems or dementia, Moore said. “It gets lost in the shuffle.”
The National Opinion
Research Center, a university-affiliated private research firm, did the
surveys in people’s homes. Laumann, its chairman, has received research
support from Pfizer Inc., the maker of Viagra.
Hundreds of questions
were asked face to face; others, like the number of lifetime sex
partners and frequency of masturbation, were asked in a questionnaire,
and 84 percent of those were completed.
Most participants were
married. But by the time they were 75 to 85, only 37 percent of women
had spouses compared to 71 percent of men. Roughly 10 percent of those
in the survey were black and more than 6 percent were Hispanic.
The proportion of each
gender reporting giving and receiving oral sex “matched up perfectly,”
Lindau said. “This gives us pretty good reassurance that men and women
are telling the same story.”
Older people were
generally sexually conservative. A small minority had more than one
partner, and very few said they paid for sex.
Researchers also used
state-of-the-art technology and products donated by several companies to
test people’s senses. Taste strips were used to see if people could
distinguish between various tastes (sour, salty). Special devices were
used to test the ability to smell certain scents, including a suspected
pheromone — a smell thought to evoke sexual responses.
Scents and tastes “get
under the skin to influence biology,” and scientists wanted to know
whether these senses diminish as people age, Lindau explained.
Niels Teunis, an
anthropologist and researcher at the Institute of Sexuality, Social
Inequality, and Health at San Francisco State University, said the
survey bolsters the “use it or lose it” factor seen in previous studies.
60 sexy years ... and countingJack
Menager, 83, and his wife, Elizabeth, 84, agree. The suburban Los
Angeles couple say they have had a good sex life for nearly 60 years.
“It gives a person
relief on any burdens or problems. It makes us forget everything —
escape,” he said, admitting that as physical endurance wanes “you have
to work at it harder.”
The couple takes twice daily walks, drinks wine in moderation and talks a lot, said his wife.
“I think it’s important,” she said of sex. “It just makes you feel close.”
More men than women felt that way. Only 13 percent of men but 35 percent of women said sex was “not at all important.”
Menopause has a big
effect on women, and the drop-off of estrogen makes many of them less
interested in sex, Dr. John Bancroft of the Kinsey Institute for
Research in Sex, Gender and Reproduction at Indiana University wrote in
an accompanying editorial.
But menopause also
means women no longer have to worry about getting pregnant, and many
have more time and feel freer after children are gone, notes Westheimer,
the sex adviser.
At age 79, she said, “I don’t ever answer personal questions” about sex. But she added, “I certainly have a zest for life.”
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