Effects of Acute Change in Health Status on Human Female Sexuality
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2015
Publication Title
Journal of Evolutionary Medicine
Volume
3
First page number:
1
Last page number:
8
Abstract
Background. Life history theory suggests that organisms face allocation challenges between maintenance and reproduction. In the face of acute illness, organisms may prioritize investments in immune function to improve condition, but do so at some expense to sexuality. Objective. Here, we investigate the effects of acute illness on human female sexuality using a quasi-experimental design. Methods. Both when sick and two weeks later when recovered, thirty women (mean age = 23 y, SD = 1.4 y) completed a questionnaire assessing sociodemographic attributes, symptom severity, and several measures of sexuality. Results. While sick, women reported markedly lower sociosexuality scores in all but one of the four domains: receptivity (female reactions that denote a willingness to engage in copulation). During illness, symptom severity was unrelated to measures of sexuality. Partnering status did not interact with health status in predicting measures of sexuality. Conclusions. These findings show that acute changes in female health status impacted sexuality, consistent with expectations from life history theory. These findings contribute to larger theoretical and empirical discussions regarding context-specific variation in female sexuality.
Keywords
sexuality; attractivity; life history; health and disease; emergency life history
Language
English
Repository Citation
Alvarez, T. A.,
Gray, P. B.
(2015).
Effects of Acute Change in Health Status on Human Female Sexuality.
Journal of Evolutionary Medicine, 3
1-8.
http://dx.doi.org/10.4303/jem/235850