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Title: The prevalence of sexual dysfunctions and sexually related distress in young women: a cross-sectional survey. Author: Zheng J, Skiba MA, Bell RJ, Islam RM, Davis SR. Journal: Fertil Steril; 2020 Feb; 113(2):426-434. PubMed ID: 32106994. Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To document the prevalence of female sexual dysfunctions (FSDs) and factors associated with FSDs and sexually related personal distress in premenopausal women. DESIGN: Community-based cross-sectional study. SETTING: Eastern states of Australia. PARTICIPANTS: Women aged 18-39 years. INTERVENTIONS(S): Not applicable. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Women were classified as having sexually related personal distress if they had a Female Sexual Distress Scale-Revised score of ≥11, and as having an FSD if they had a low Profile of Female Sexual Function desire, arousal, orgasmic function, responsiveness, or sexual self-image domain score plus sexually related personal distress. Sociodemographic factors associated with an FSD were examined by means of multivariable logistic regression. RESULT(S): The prevalence of sexually related personal distress was 50.2%. Sexually related personal distress without dysfunction affected 29.6%, and 20.6% had at least one FSD. The proportions of women with self-image, arousal, desire, orgasm, and responsiveness dysfunction were 11.1%, 9%, 8%, 7.9%, and 3.4% respectively. Sexual self-image dysfunction was associated with being overweight, obese, living together, not married, married, breastfeeding, and taking a psychotropic medication. Psychotropic medication was significantly associated with all FSDs. Independent risk factors for nonspecific sexually related personal distress included psychotropic medication., sexual inactivity, and infertility treatment. CONCLUSION(S): That one-half of young Australian women have sexually related personal distress and one in five women have at least an FSD, with sexual self-image predominating, is concerning. The high prevalence of distress signals the importance of health professionals being adequately prepared to discuss sexual health concerns.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]