Life is
Shorter for Men, but Sexually Active Life
Expectancy is longer
Newswise
— At age 55, men can expect another 15 years
of sexual activity, but women that age
should expect less than 11 years, according
to a study by University of Chicago
researchers published early online March 10
by the British Medical Journal. Men in good
or excellent health at 55 can add 5 to 7
years to that number. Equally healthy women
gain slightly less, 3 to 6 years.
One consolation for women
is that many of them seem not to miss it.
Men tend to marry younger women, die sooner
and care more about sex, the study
confirmed. Although 72 percent of men aged
75 to 85 have partners, fewer than 40
percent of women that age do.
Only half of women 75-85
who remained sexually active rated their sex
lives as "good," and only 11 percent of all
women that age report regularly thinking
about or being interested in sex. Among
those age 57 to 85 not living with a
partner, 57 percent of men were interested
in sex, compared to only 11 percent of
women.
"Interest in sex,
participation in sex and even the quality of
sexual activity were higher for men than
women, and this gender gap widened with
age," said lead author Stacy Tessler Lindau,
MD, associate professor of obstetrics and
gynecology at the University of Chicago.
But the study also
"affirms a positive association between
later-life health, sexual partnership and
sexual activity," she said.
Lindau and co-author
Natalia Gavrilova focused on two large
surveys, the National Survey of Midlife
Development, involving about 3,000 adults
aged 25 to 74 and completed in 1996, and the
National Social Life Health and Aging
Project, involving another 3,000 adults aged
57 to 85, completed in 2006.
Participants provided
information about their relationship status
and rated the quality of their sex lives and
how often they had sex. They also rated the
level of their general health as poor, fair,
good, very good or excellent.
The results showed that
men are more likely to be sexually active,
report a good sex life and be interested in
sex than women. This difference was most
stark among the 75 to 85-year-old group,
where almost 40 percent of men, compared to
17 percent of women, were sexually active.
The study also introduced
a new health measure, "sexually active life
expectancy," or SALE, the average remaining
years of sexually active life. For men, SALE
was about ten years lower than total life
expectance. For women it was 20 years lower.
Men at the age of 30, for
example, have a sexually active life
expectancy of nearly 35 years, but they can,
on average, expect to remain alive for 45
years, including a sexless final decade. For
30-year-old women, SALE is almost 31 years
but total life expectancy is more than 50.
So men that age can
anticipate remaining sexually active for 78
percent of their remaining lifespan, while
women at 30 can expect to remain sexually
active for only 61 percent of the remaining
years.
The authors conclude that
"sexually active life expectancy estimation
is a new life expectancy tool than can be
used for projecting public health and
patient needs in the arena of sexual
health," and that "projecting the population
patterns of later life sexual activity is
useful for anticipating need for public
health resources, expertise and medical
services."
In an accompanying
editorial, Professor Patricia Goodson from
Texas University says Lindau and Gavrilova's
research is both refreshing and hopeful. She
says: "the study bears good news in the form
of hope ... the news that adults in the US
can enjoy many years of sexual activity
beyond age 55 is promising."
Goodson adds that many
unanswered questions remain in the field of
older people and sexuality, such as problems
with measurement and silence regarding the
sexual health of ageing homosexual, bisexual
or intersexed people.
"They stand as dim
reminders of the limitations inherent in
applying science to the study of complex
human realities, and the cultural values
shaping the topics we choose to study," she
concludes.
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