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Sexuality, including sexual functioning, is an important part of health and well-being. Sexual dysfunction is the persistent impairment in a domain of sexual function (desire, arousal, or orgasm) or sexual pain that is associated with significant personal distress. The relationship between infertility and sexual dysfunction is not well understood, though evidence suggests that this relationship is likely bidirectional and individuals with infertility have higher rates of disruptions in sexual functioning. The etiology of male and female sexual dysfunction is most commonly multifactorial and treatment for sexual dysfunction typically requires an interdisciplinary approach. Routine screening for sexual dysfunction is recommended. Infertility mental health professionals are well-suited to screen for sexual dysfunction, and therapeutic interventions for the management of sexual dysfunction exist. Commonly used existing approaches that are summarized here include cognitive–behavioral therapy, sensate focus sex therapy, mindfulness-based behavior therapy or mindfulness-based cognitive–behavioral therapy, and directed masturbation training.
Female sexual experience has received more attention from the scientific community in recent decades, but there is still debate surrounding its importance from an evolutionary perspective. Specifically, researchers have debated whether female orgasm is an adaptation reflecting special design or a functionless byproduct of strong selection for male orgasm that arises in women because of early shared ontogeny with men. Scholars who endorse a byproduct explanation of women’s orgasm argue that it is unlikely the female orgasm was designed by sexual selection because, unlike male orgasm, women’s orgasm is not necessary for conception. Supporters of the byproduct position further contend that an adaptive explanation of women’s orgasm is unlikely because orgasm is more difficult to induce in women compared to men and because women’s orgasm is more likely to occur during masturbation or oral sex than it is during vaginal intercourse. In other words, proponents of the byproduct explanation for female orgasm liken female orgasm to male nipples: something that offers no adaptive function and is vestigial, but that arises because selection for that trait is so strong in the opposite-sex that the shared early stages of development lead to it appearing in both sexes. However, there is considerable evidence that female orgasm is far from vestigial and may have increased the reproductive success of ancestral women. Researchers who support the adaptation explanation of women’s orgasm dispute the byproduct hypothesis by pointing to evidence that female orgasm increases women’s fitness through one or more mechanisms. Female orgasm reinforces and rewards women’s sexual behaviors, thereby encouraging women to engage in behaviors that can result in conception. Also, evidence suggests that women’s orgasm may reinforce or increase pair-bonding among couples, act as a mate- or sire-selection mechanism, and increase the odds of conception. This chapter reviews the literature on women’s orgasm and concludes that a byproduct account is an inadequate explanation of the current findings, although additional research into the evolved functions of women’s orgasm is nonetheless warranted.
Sexual response in obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD) research and practice is overlooked. According to the Dual Control Model, satisfactory sexual response is based upon a balance of sexual excitation and inhibition. The assessment of sexual response in OCD may have clinical implications, such as the integration of sex therapy in psychotherapeutic intervention. The present study was aimed at comparing sexual excitation and inhibition levels between OCD patients and matched control subjects, and investigating whether obsessive beliefs might predict sexual excitation/inhibition.
Methods
Seventy-two OCD patients (mean age ± standard deviation [SD]: 34.50 ± 10.39 years) and 72 matched control subjects (mean age ± SD: 34.25 ± 10.18) were included (62.50% men and 37.50% women in both groups). The Obsessive Compulsive Inventory-Revised (OCI-R), the Obsessive Beliefs Questionnaire-46 (OBQ-46), and the Sexual Inhibition/Sexual Excitation Scales (SIS/SES) were administered.
Results
Patients with OCD showed significantly higher levels of sexual excitation, inhibition due to threat of performance failure, and inhibition due to threat of performance consequences than the controls. In addition, the patients with more severe symptoms showed lower excitation than those with less severe symptoms, and those with higher perfectionism had stronger inhibition due to threat of performance failure than those with lower perfectionism.
Conclusions
This is the first study exploring sexual response in OCD according to the Dual Control Model. Sexual response is an impaired quality of life outcome in OCD that should be assessed in routine clinical practice. These findings support the importance of addressing specific obsessive beliefs to improve sexuality in OCD patients.
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