Title: SexualityReproduction
1Sexuality/Reproduction
2Definitions
- Sexuality - the condition of being characterized
and distinguished by sex (Microsoft Encarta 97
Encyclopedia).
3Definitions
- We are sexual beings throughout our lifespan.
Sex is an expression of love. It's not about
sperm swimming up vaginas it's about tenderness,
the desire to please someone we care about. It's
about being completely at ease with another
person-and feeling good about that (Cadoff 1997).
4Sexual Health
- involves both promotion and prevention behaviors
and the nurturing of healthy personal sexual
lives.
5Children
- It is important to raise confident,
compassionate, and kind children, which will
teach them more about how to behave in their
adult relationships than any discussion of
anatomy
6Early Sexual Needs
- Teach infants them that people who care about
them will respond to their needs - When they cry you pick them up gently and speak
softly - You feed them when they're hungry,
- tuck an extra blanket around them when they're
chilly. - (Cadoff 1997).
7Sexual Responses in Infants
- Boys have erections from infancy.
- Frequently explore their genitals
- by the age of ten months deliberately fondle
themselves - By age 3 understand the concept of public versus
private behavior. - One of the biggest jobs parents have is
teaching children what's appropriate under what
circumstances (Cadoff 1997).
8Importance of Role Modeling
- Children learn how to form happy, loving
relationships by growing up in a happy, loving
home. - From their parents' hugs, passing kisses, and
friendly pats, a child sees love in operation. - Many adults whose families never expressed
affection just don't know how (Cadoff 1997).
9Childhood Victimization Leads to
- Variety of negative health behavioral
consequences - prostitution,
- promiscuity
- teenage pregnancy
10Adolescence
- Our sexuality, integration of gender sexual
orientation with self-expression, takes center
stage in adolescence (Brown 1994). - The physical, emotional, cognitive growth
hallmark of the period forms the basis of to
develop maintain trusting and intimate
relationships.
11Antrhopological Findings
- Margaret Mead hypothesized that the crisis of
adolescent sexuality in our society was a
function of the complexities turbulence of the
social system would not exist in a simpler
culture. - Her study of female adolescents in Samoa
concluded that puberty, uninhibited sexual
activity, and pregnancy did not disrupt the lives
of these young women. - Adolescent pregnancy and sexuality were accepted
as natural lifecycle events.
12Media Portrayal of Sexuality
- The media in the U.S. reflect the "Jekyll and
Hyde" attitudes regarding sexuality - We extol the excitement of sex, we condemn sex
at a young age premarital sex (Tobias 1998). - A reluctance to discuss or portray responsible
sexual behavior instead offer mindless
constant display of titillating sexuality. - Our society bombards our adolescents with images
glamorizing sexual activity. - Historically, messages of sexual responsibility
including contraception have been taboo.
13Piaget's Model
- The completion of developmental tasks complements
the gradual shift in adolescent cognitive styles.
- Adolescents move from concrete to formal
operations, developing the ability to think
abstractly. - The rate of acquisition of these skills is highly
variable, - sometimes spanning 10-15 years, with only 35 of
16- to 17-year-olds possessing the ability to
move beyond concrete operations.
14Concrete-thinking adolescents
- Lack the ability to understand consequences of
high-risk behavior. - Difficulty understanding cause effect.
- Explanations are based on past experience
regardless of relevance. - may leap to the assumption they cannot get
pregnant fail to understand the need for
contraception if unprotected intercourse on 1 or
2 occasions without getting pregnant - Wrongly assume that if no obvious symptoms they
cannot be infected with a STD (Tobias 1998).
15Adolescents are at elevated risk for HIV infection
- Disproportionate impact on minorities.
- More than half the adolescents in the US are
sexually active, - 86 of men are sexually active by age 19
- (Braverman 1993).
16Age at first intercourse (Blum)
- Age Female Male
- 10-11 6.4 14.5
- 12-13 17.0 22.0
- 14-15 42.8 37.6
- 16-17 33.2 25.0
17Gay Youth
- Feelings of homosexual attraction in a Minnesota
study - 5.2 of 12th -grade males and
- 8.5 of 11th -grade females reported (Braverman
1993 p 66 1). - Sexual orientation is believed to have a
biological etiology since identical twins have
similar sexual orientation - (Braverman 1993 p 662).
18Adults
19Infertility Treatment
- Infertility is defined as having no pregnancy
after a year of unprotected regular intercourse.
20Current Options
- Couples with concerns about infertility currently
have several options. - medical help,
- adoption,
- becoming foster parents,
- using alternative therapies,
- focusing on other life goals.
- In one study of 131 infertile couples, the
medical option was chosen in more than 80 of the
cases. The most frequently mentioned motive was
the desire to have a child - (Van Balen 1997).
21Infertility Treatment
- It has been nineteen years since the birth of the
first baby via in vitro fertilization. - New techniques that may soon become available
- intracytoplasmic sperm injection.
- preimplantation genetic diagnosis,
- use of fetal oocytes, and
- cryopreservation of ovarian tissue.
- genetic cloning.
22Elderly
- Common myths / misinformation on sexuality
- intercourse and ejaculation of semen are
debilitating will hasten the onset of old age - older women who still enjoy sex were probably
nymphomaniac when thy were younger. - we are not sexually desirable, desirous, or
capable at an older age. - 54 of married seniors 65 of women over 70
years old are sexually active - How do you think Viagra may have changed these
numbers in the past few years? (Loehr 1997).
23Special Groups
24Lesbian
- Lesbians est. 5 of the female population
- 12.5 of women have had incidental homosexual
experiences.
25Lesbian
- Risks for multiple psychosocial problems
- rejection by family, friends,
- poor school performance,
- a higher drop out rate,
- verbal and physical abuse (34),
- homelessness,
- substance abuse (39),
- childhood abuse (20),
- depression (49),
- suicide (27) (Lehmann 1998).
26Gay Males
- 17 of males have been involved in a homosexual
encounter by the age of 19.
27Increased Medical Risk for Gays
- STDs
- HIV infection,
- Between Jan-June 1989 Jan-June 1994, AIDS among
gay couples incr. 31 from 12.1 to 15.9 cases
per 100,000 males 13 years old or older. - Rate increased 51 in Midwest (MM WR Weekly,
6-2-95). - hepatitis,
- cytomegalovirus,
- enteric pathogens,
- genital trauma leading to hemorrhoids and
fissures, and - fecal incontinence (Braverman 1993).
28Disabled
- Sexually functional but may be unable to perform
intercourse without assistance. Â
29Prevalence
- In the news a variety of sexually related
headlines - President Clinton
- Robert Leroy Anderson
- Michael Jackson
- cloning of animals,
- many others.
30- In the US there were an estimated 1 million
pregnancies among women 15-19 years old, - 95 of teenage pregnancies unintended.
- Average age of sexual initiation in one sample
was 13.8 years.
31STD'S
- The US has the highest rates of STDs in the
industrialized world - 50100 times gt than other industrialized nations.
- An estimated 12 million new cases of STDs occur
in the US each year. - gt 85 of the most common infectious diseases in
the US are sexually transmitted. (CDC) - half of all HIV infection in the US occurs gt
age of 25.
32US estimated
- 4,000,000/yr new cases of Chlamydia
- 800,000/yr new cases of Gonorrhea
- 500,000-1,000,00 /yr new cases of Human Papilloma
virus (HPV) (high risk for cervical cancer) - 200,000-500,000/yr new cases of Genital Herpes
- 101,000 /yr new cases of syphilis
- 40,000-80,000/yr new HIV infections
33Teenagers
- Pregnancy rate
- One million US teenage women
- 12 of all 15-19 year-olds (CDC).
- gt 50 of all teenage pregnancies occur during the
first 6 months of sexual activity gt 20 occur in
the first month. - Three million teenagers acquire a sexually
transmitted infection, - adolescents account for 25 of the new sexually
transmitted infections in the US.
34Costs to the Individual and Society
- STD's add 17 billion dollars to the nations
health care costs each year. - HIV infection is a leading cause of death among
15-24-year-olds in the US. Three million cases
of STDs annually in teens.
35South Dakota Teen Pregnancy
- One million pregnant teens in the US ea. yr.
- In SD in 1990 1,425 pregnancies in women age
15-19, (56.9/1,000) - lower than the national average.
- abortion rates declined in SD from 1980 to 1990.
36Costs of Teenage Pregnancies
- 1985 - 1990, the public costs (through AID to
Families with dependent Children, Medicaid, and
food stamps) related to teenage pregnancies
120.3 billion dollars. - Est. 48.1 billion dollars could have been saved
if each birth had been postponed until the mother
was at least 20 years old (Spitz 1993).
37Gay Teens
- 110 adolescents struggle with sexual orientation
issues. - Study of involvement in a homosexual encounter by
the age 19 - 6 of females
- 17 of males (Baverman 1993).
38Risk Factors for Unsafe Sexual Activity (Beitz
1998)
- Recent loss or change
- Lower cognitive development
- School nonattendance
- History of sexual abuse
- Substance abuse
- Previous sexual behavior Early intercourse
- Low self-efficacy (especially for contraception)
- Stressed of depressed mental state
- Low internal health locus of control
- Male gender
- Poor communication with parents
- Low self-esteem
- Religious Noninvolvement
- Peer and sibling sexual activity
- Irresponsible media influences
- Scholastic underachieving
39Interventions
- Abstinence is greatest sexual health promotion
behavior available to Americans, but abstinence
cannot be the sole focus in a sexual health
curriculum because most Americans will ultimately
become sexually active (Beitz 1998). - Britain operates a national network of free,
open-access STD clinics responsible for STD
reporting. - These clinics are thought to treat the majority
of STDs and are known to be used by all sectors
of the population (Michael 1998).
40Interventions
- Former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop suggested
that many of the serious problems of the US
derive from its inadequate sex education - (from Beitz 1998, p32).
41Interventions for Parents
- gt comprehensive or broader messages encompassing
a greater number of sex-related topics that were
delivered by the mother were associated with less
sexual risk behavior among adolescents. - Mothers who were skilled communicators about
sex-related topics were gt likely to discuss a
broad range of sex-related topics with their
adolescent, more likely to be heard by their
adolescent during those discussions.
42Sexual Violence
- Among women with disabilities
- 51 to 79 have had cases of reported sexual
violence. - 88 to 98 of perpetrators are male for these
victims. - Up to 30 of gay male teens attempt suicide.
43Sexual Addiction
- Any driven-type of repetitive sexual behavior,
characterized by extraordinary frequency of
sexual activity as well as revolving partners
(usually more than one encounter a day), all
devoted to alleviating the underlying
psychological pain (depression anxiety).
44Classification Diagnoses for Addictive Sexual
Behavior
- satyriasis, nymphomania, paraphilias
(perversions), obsessive-compulsive disorders,
impulse control disorder, compulsive sexual
behavior, and sexual addiction. - What these people have in common is depression,
anxiety, and low self-esteem that is
self-medicated with hypersexual activity (Myers
1995).
45Compulsive Sexual Behavior
- Compulsive sexual behavior - has symptoms of a
person preoccupied with sexual gratification
leading to a disruption in daily life. - This sexual behavior may be categorized as legal
(multiple partners, compulsively cruising,
pornography) or illegal (voyeurism, public
masturbation, exhibitionism). In either case,
the behavior is compulsive (Watter 1992).
46Recognition DX of Sexual Addictions
- Ask the patient about relationships.
- Is he or she married?
- Are you in a steady relationship?
- How is it going?
- Is the sex satisfying?
47Gender Issues in Sexual Addictions
- Much more is written about men and sexual
addictive behavior than women - Women, are not perceived as threatening
- Women engage in repetitive sexual behavior, but
men tend not to report the behavior. - A man who sees a woman exposing herself in public
is more likely to appreciate the view than report
it women are more likely to call the police when
faced with similar circumstances
48Hypersexual Activity likely Sign of a Sexual
Addiction
- C/O inability to find enough partners
- Differential DX 20 of the population suffers
from a form of mental distress at some point - 10 - 15 are affected by depression
- 6 - 8 by mood swings or low moods
- Hallmark low libido
- People with sexual addiction appear depressed,
yet exhibit hypersexual behavior
49Psychotherapist or Sex Therapist Referral
- Manage repetitive or compulsive sexual behavior
must same as those addicted to alcohol or drugs - Sexual addiction cuts across gender and sexual
orientation fairly evenly. - Presence of depression or a tendency to exhibit
compulsive addictive behavior manifests itself as
a sexual disorder