Academic literature on the topic 'Sexology'

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Journal articles on the topic "Sexology"

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Balbona Rodríguez, Juncal, Enrique Oltra Rodríguez, Ana Belén Carmona Rubio, and María Úbeda Cantera. "Formación en sexología y su influencia en las actitudes de las enfermeras hacia la sexualidad." Enfermería Global 23, no. 1 (2024): 1–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.6018/eglobal.568661.

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Background: Sexology training and a tolerant attitude towards sexuality are key for nurses to be able to approach the topic appropriately at work. Therefore, the main goal of this study is to determine whether sexology training as part of the nursing degree affects students’ attitudes towards sexuality.Method: A case-control study was performed on 127 students and postgraduates from Facultad de Enfermería de Gijón, dividing the sample in two groups according to their attendance to specific sexology training. The attitudes were assessed using a translated version of Trueblood Sexual Attitude Questionnaire, and data analysis was performed using SPSS software.Results: There are statistically significant differences (p= 0.015) between the mean total score from the group that had received the training (6.53 ± 0.81) and the mean total score from the group that hadn’t (6.13 ± 1.06). Attitudes from members of both groups were more open towards other people’s behaviour (7.53 ± 0.76 versus 7.25 ± 1.06) than towards their own (5.54 ± 1.03 versus 5.00 ± 1.28), respectively.Conclusions: It is verified that receiving sexology training correlates with more liberal attitudes towards sexuality. Only 24.8% of nursing faculties in Spain offer specific sexology courses. Introducción: Tener unas actitudes tolerantes hacia la sexualidad, junto con la formación en sexología son aspectos clave para favorecer el abordaje de la sexualidad en la práctica profesional de las enfermeras. Por ello, el objetivo principal de este estudio fue comprobar si recibir formación en sexología durante los estudios de Grado en Enfermería influye sobre las actitudes hacia la sexualidad del alumnado.Método: Se realizó un estudio caso-control en 127 estudiantes de la Facultad de Enfermería de Gijón, dividiendo a la muestra en función de si habían recibido o no formación específica en sexología. Para medir dichas actitudes se utilizó una versión adaptada al castellano del Trueblood Sexual Attitude Questionnaire (TSAQ), analizándose los datos mediante el programa SPSS.Resultados: Existen diferencias estadísticamente significativas (p=0,015) entre la puntuación media total obtenida en el TSAQ por los estudiantes que sí habían recibido formación en sexología (6,53 ± 0,81) comparada con los que no (6,13 ± 1,06). De igual modo, las actitudes de las personas integrantes de ambos grupos son más liberales para los comportamientos ajenos (7,53 ± 0,76 frente a 7,25 ± 1,06) que para los propios (5,54 ± 1,03 frente a 5,00 ± 1,28), respectivamente.Conclusiones: Se verifica que recibir formación en sexología se relaciona con la tenencia de unas actitudes hacia la sexualidad más liberales. Sólo un 24,8% de las Facultades de Enfermería españolas ofertan asignaturas específicas en sexología.
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Lief, Harold I. "Sexology." JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association 261, no. 19 (1989): 2889. http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jama.1989.03420190165060.

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Renshaw, Domeena C. "Sexology." JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association 254, no. 16 (1985): 2343. http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jama.1985.03360160175053.

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Lief, H. I. "Sexology." JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association 261, no. 19 (1989): 2889–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jama.261.19.2889.

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Lubin, Joan, and Jeanne Vaccaro. "After Sexology." Social Text 39, no. 3 (2021): 1–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/01642472-9034376.

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Abstract Is sexology over? What does one do with its history, at once a seemingly remote relic and a persistent logic of biopolitics today? “Sexology and Its Afterlives” begins from the premise that the history of sexology lives in the infrastructures of the present. Locating the afterlives of sexology in material and aesthetic form, this introduction to the special issue engages the largely unmarked detritus of a disaggregated sexological project, whose components have found renewed life in the biopolitical apparatus. The contributors to this issue identify not only familiar sites of sexological persistence (the sex-segregated public toilet) but also less immediately obvious ones (the Moynihan report, redlining, the army base) as executing the unfinished business of the sexological project. This breadth of sexological diffusion makes its analysis a necessarily interdisciplinary prospect, and the contributors call on disability studies, trans studies, Black studies, women-of-color feminism, visual culture, and the history of sexuality, generating emergent concepts, including crip-of-color critique (Kim), binary-abolitionist praxis (Stryker), a “trans-mad” aesthetic (Crawford), and a shift toward expressivity as a framework (Musser). Across the issue, newly imagined sites of collective politics come into view as a payoff for working through the stalled-out imaginaries of sexological binarisms.
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Money, John. "Nosological Sexology." Journal of Psychology & Human Sexuality 4, no. 4 (1992): 111–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j056v04n04_08.

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Weiman-Kelman, Zohar. "Yiddish Sexology." GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies 29, no. 1 (2023): 77–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/10642684-10144421.

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While much has been written about the pathologizing of Jewish bodies by European sexologists, and while the role of Jewish scholars in the study of deviance has been recognized, next to nothing has been written about how European Jews theorized their own sex, in their own deviant tongue. This article proposes to rectify this lack by turning to a completely neglected body of work: sexology written in Yiddish. Yiddish sexology, produced globally across the first half of the twentieth century, reveals an array of new imaginaries of corporeality and sociality, coming from diverse transnational Jewish communities and reflecting varying engagements with the emergent science of sex. This article focuses on the work of one doctor, Leonard Landis, working at the turn of the twentieth century in New York, who was by far the most prolific (and controversial) author of Yiddish sexology and yet remains entirely unstudied. Recovering his unique voice and exposing some of its intricate intertextual and cross-cultural dialogues, this article argues for the vitality of including Yiddish sexology within global histories of sexuality.
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Watter, Daniel N. "Forensic sexology versus clinical sexology: Some cautionary comments." Sexual and Relationship Therapy 21, no. 2 (2006): 143–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14681990600637671.

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Varregoso, M. I., G. Borges, and R. Xavier. "Sexology population characterization – a two years’ experience at a Lisbon specialized centre." European Psychiatry 33, S1 (2016): S592. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2016.01.2205.

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IntroductionWithin psychiatry, sexology is a very particular area of expertise both by the nature and specificity of its diagnosis, as by the various difficulties and challenges their patients place. Sexology is a sub-specialty niche, but also a vast universe that covers such diverse conditions as paraphilia, gender dysphoria or sexual dysfunction. The sexology consultation of Santa Maria Hospital (HSM) is one of the biggest centers specialized in sexual disorders in the country. Consultations depend on the collaboration of a sexologist psychiatrist and psychiatry residents in close connection with endocrinology, urology and plastic surgery services.ObjectiveWe intend to conduct a characterization of the population observed in the HSM sexology consultation, in a period of 2 years, from the analyses of different general and diagnosis-specific relevant variables.MethodsWe intent to make a descriptive analysis of the population that attended the sexology consultation over the last 2 years. The sample study refers to all patients who have been specifically referred to sexology department or that directly requested access to this consultation. Data will be collected from medical computer records.ResultsThrough systematic evaluation of different variables we can possibly conclude by some putative associations. A comprehensive characterization of this particular population is a possible method for a better and deeper insight on the diagnosis itself.ConclusionsThe purpose of this work is to increase peers’ sensitivity both to sexology and to the patients sexology serves.Disclosure of interestThe authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.
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Allan, Jonathan A. "Circumcision Debates in Sexology Magazine (1934–1975)." Journal of Men’s Studies 29, no. 3 (2021): 354–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/10608265211004574.

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This article explores articles about circumcision that appeared in Sexology: Sex Science Magazine, with particular attention to how the debates shifted and changed over a forty-year period. The articles on circumcision in Sexology begin in November 1934 and end in the May 1973 issue, with every decade of publication includes articles on circumcision, corresponding with growing debates about the medicalization of routine neonatal circumcision. The first article sought to understand “circumcision among savage peoples,” which was quickly followed by an article on “Circumcision among the Jews,” and then “Medical view of circumcision.” In its earliest issues, Sexology advanced arguments in favor of routine circumcision, but in its final article on the topic, Sexology asks, “what’s so good about circumcision?”
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Sexology"

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Alsaoub, Nour. "Female autoerotism in twentieth century sexology and sex research." Thesis, University of York, 2015. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/10037/.

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In this thesis I argue that female masturbation is still in some ways seen as problematic even though it is no longer represented as a basis for shame and sin. Historians have shed light on the vicious campaign against masturbation in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, but little attention has been dedicated to the twentieth century, beyond overviews of how ideas changed so that masturbation was no longer, allegedly, condemned. Although I will begin with a consideration of attitudes towards female masturbation in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, my main focus will be on the twentieth century through an in-depth analysis of the works of the prominent sexologists and sex researchers: Havelock Ellis, Freud, Kinsey, Masters and Johnson and Shere Hite. I address specific problems in their arguments regarding female sexuality in general and female autoerotism in particular. I contend that these influential figures participated in the great confusion we have about female masturbation today. At first it was thought that excessive or prolonged masturbation led to psychological or sexual problems. When later sexologists tried to present masturbation in a better light, it continued to be, for them, an inferior form of sexual practice. Even when female autoerotism is advocated, it is justified by claiming that it leads to better "real sex". Finally, through a reading of recent popular culture, my study explores how sex researchers' attitudes towards masturbation influenced our own, resulting in a paradox: it is still a secretive practice and yet can be celebrated in women's magazines. In concentrating on the twentieth century I seek to substantiate my argument that the problems we have with masturbation did not stop at the end of the nineteenth century. My thesis is an attempt at presenting female masturbation as neither a disease nor a cure. It is a step towards a better comprehension of a wide-spread, mostly pleasurable, practice while avoiding both condemnation and overenthusiasm.
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Garibian, Taline. "De la question sexuelle à la sexologie médicale : une histoire des savoirs sur les sexualités (Suisse romande, 1890-1970)." Thesis, Toulouse 2, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017TOU20052.

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L’histoire de la sexualité dont il est question ici commence donc au tournant du siècle. Les écrits sur la sexualité se multiplient et si tous n’ont pas le succès de l’ouvrage du médecin vaudois Auguste Forel (1848 – 1931), en 1905, ils témoignent de l’intérêt du public pour ces questions. Cette période marque donc le début d’une véritable clinique de la sexualité, qui, si elle demeure cantonnée à des consultations privées, n’en pose pas moins les bases de ce qui va devenir une discipline enseignée à l’université à la fin des années 1960.Dans les premières décennies du siècle, les théories analytiques marquent profondément le champ des sciences du psychisme en Suisse. Outre les apports théoriques des doctrines freudiennes, on voit émerger un véritable front d’action en faveur de l’hygiène mentale agrégé au mouvement pour l’hygiène sociale et morale qui ne tarde pas à s’intéresser aux couples hétérosexuels. Mais les écarts à la norme ne sont pas pour autant délaissés et de nombreux travaux consacrés aux paraphilies contribuent dès les années 1940 à l’édification d’un dispositif médico-légal d’encadrement des « déviant.e.s ».À partir de année 1950, la sexologie gagne progressivement les institutions académiques. Cette évolution doit se comprendre à l’aune des dynamiques sociales et politiques qui caractérisent les années 1960. Alors que les luttes en faveur du droit à l’avortement et à la contraception donnent une résonance importante aux questions sexuelles, on observe une relative libération des mœurs. Il s’agit saisir les étapes de cette institutionnalisation en nous intéressant non seulement aux contenus scientifiques proposés mais aussi à leurs portées politiques. Le développement de la sexologie et son intégration au système de santé ne sauraient s’envisager indépendamment de l’agenda politique des autorités en matière de famille, de natalité ou de criminalité, pour ne prendre que quelques exemples
The history of sexuality presented here starts at the end of the 19th century when the number of medical books on sexuality increases. In French speaking Switzerland, Auguste Forel is already a well-known psychiatrist when he is publishing The sexual question. During this period there are not only books, which are published, but also numerous private clinics are treating ordinary sexual disorders.During the first decade of the 20th century psychoanalysis and others sciences of the psyche have a great influence on the knowledge of sexuality. In the same time many reformers are spreading a program of Social Hygiene among the population but also among the sanitary authorities. This program includes a struggle for the defence of the family, which seems to them threated by many dangers – including divorce. In this context the sexual pleasure becomes central. An important part of the sexologists are focusing on the heterosexual couple. But this must not hide that some people remain in the margin because of their “abnormal sexuality”. Far from ignore them, the medical science take an active part in the politics of regulation and normalisation of sexuality.During this century, the specialists of sexuality participate in many debates on social and political issues related to their field. This process includes a kind of specialisation and at the end of the sixties sexuality becomes an area of studies in the universities of Lausanne and Geneva
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Mayberry, Lorel. "A qualitative study of undergraduate students' learning experience in sexology." Thesis, Curtin University, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/1156.

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This study responds to significant issues related to the problematic nature of perceptions of sexuality in Australian society. It also explores the extent to which the students’ view of sexuality can be influenced through a sexuality education programme delivered at tertiary level.An investigation of the literature, comprehensive interviews and feedback from students identifies the factors which form the perceptions of sexuality that students have by the time they reach young adulthood and enter the sexology class.The qualitative study provides insights into how higher education students extend their understanding of sexuality. These insights, elicited through the study, supports the considerable body of anecdotal evidence that has been gathered over thirty years in the award winning1 sexuality education programme at Curtin University. The study provides an understanding of the impact of sexuality education in an adult learning environment, using ethnographic methods to reveal ways in which undergraduate students perceive and interpret new knowledge acquired from formal studies.The study also illuminates how the learning strategies and content from the sexology class influence participants’ perceptions of their own sexuality and the sexuality of others. Students’ responses to the class were ascertained through reflective writing, interviews and focus groups. Participants demonstrated that they had responded to the ‘sex-positive’ approach to teaching and learning by revealing a more open-minded, less judgemental disposition, with an enhanced body image and added confidence to discuss sexual issues.The rich body of information emerging from this study can be used to enhance the development of sexuality education programmes in tertiary institutions and the wider community. The information includes the approach, processes, key content and the learning outcomes.It is hoped that the participants’ stories throughout this report will resonate with the reader. The aim of this report is to make a contribution to an important issue that has thus far received scant attention in the literature.
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Shane, Elisabeth Ann. "Sex, crimes, and common sense: framing femininity from sensation to sexology." Diss., University of Iowa, 2012. https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/1901.

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My dissertation tracks the production of "common sense" about female sexuality and psychology in nineteenth-century sensational British literature. I move from the sensation novel's heyday, represented by Wilkie Collins's The Moonstone (1868) and Mary Elizabeth Braddon's Lady Audley's Secret (1862), through the fin-de-siècle Gothic literary revival with Bram Stoker's Dracula(1895), and conclude with a reading of the representation of aberrant female sexuality in the emergent science of nineteenth-century sexology. For Victorian readers, few things could have seemed further removed from sensation literature--from lurid crime novels to sordid news stories to sexualized science--than common sense. Yet, my project illustrates the role of sensational literature in provoking the dark millennial fantasies that passed as common sense and often animated theories of femininity expressed in late-Victorian science. Common sense retains its rhetorical force through the assumption that its premises arise naturally and apply universally. But if we take a historical view, a troubling pattern emerges: common sense has often worked to preserve reactionary views of femininity. For example, in the nineteenth century, common sense led medical professionals to the belief that a woman's reproductive system left her constitutionally more susceptible to "hysteria." define common sense as the product of the frequent iteration of a particular train of associative logic that results in the naturalization and legitimation of claims about reality, even if those claims are both sensationalized and arbitrary. The rhetorical force of common sense requires the perpetual obscuration of its origins. The elusive and frustrating quality of common sense as a cognitive category derives from its ability, in Stuart Hall's words, to "represent itself as the 'traditional wisdom or truth of the ages,' [when] in fact, it is deeply a product of history, 'part of the historical process'" ("Gramsci's Relevance" 431). Hall describes this type of associative relationship between disparate figures often exemplified in the logic of common sense as "an articulation." What Hall refers to as an "articulation" might also be called, when viewed through the lens of literary theory, a "metonymic chain," wherein the literal term for one thing is applied to another with which it becomes linked, articulated. Both terms—articulation and metonymic chain—effectively describe the illusion of necessary correspondence in mere arbitrary association. My translation of this cultural phenomenon into the framework of literary analysis allows for a precise description of the rhetorical transformations involved in conjuring common sense. With frequent iteration, metonymic association may appear to be based on some more substantial similarity—not circumstantial, but necessary; not the product of sensationalism, but the inevitable conclusion derived from and constituting common sense. Common sense regarding female sexuality has frequently been preserved through sensationalism; but paradoxically, sensationalism is often most effective when its characteristic paranoia seems somehow self-evidently justified, even rational. In other words, sensationalism works best to consolidate the paranoid patterns of associative logic informing the nineteenth-century figuration of femininity when it appears not to be working at all—when sensationalism takes on the weight of common sense.
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Madsen, Jeffrey B. "Males' ipsative score distortion on Affinity 2.0 /." Diss., CLICK HERE for online access, 2008. http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/ETD/image/etd2479.pdf.

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Crosby, Daniel. "Non-pedophilic heterosexual male response to Affinity 2.0 /." Diss., CLICK HERE for online access, 2007. http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/ETD/image/etd2495.pdf.

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Bauer, Heike. "Inverts and degenerates : sexology, literature and cultural modification in Britain, 1864-1939." Thesis, Birkbeck (University of London), 2004. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.409569.

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Lobdell, Bambi Lyn. "A man in all that the name implies reclassification of Lucy Ann/Joseph Israel Lobdell /." Diss., Online access via UMI:, 2007.

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Smith, Judith Ann. "Genealogies of desire : "Uranianism", mysticism and science in Britain, 1889-1940." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/2643.

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This article examines early twentieth-century British "Uranian" same-sex sexualities as a distinct entity from other labels for homosexuality. British sexologists, feminists, and other radical socialist/anarchist reformers invoked scientized versions of mysticism and Asian religions to conceptualize different, though intersecting, meanings for the Uranian. Historians of sexuality, however, tend to conflate the term "Uranian" with the other various and conflicting medico-scientific concepts circulating at the time, such as "homosexual," "sexual invert," and "intermediate sex." Overstating the slippage between terms, however, obscures the significance of Uranianism in the history of same-sex eroticism, and reinforces a dichotomy between spirituality and modernity. The Uranian discourses examined here epitomize a "progressive" historical moment that elaborated the scientific origins for the spirit, soul, and a divine will in the constitution of modern sexual/spiritual subjects. In many ways, Uranianism challenged the late nineteenth-century medical-sexological discourses that demarcated the homosexual as a pathological "type" by creating a more fluid understanding of sexuality through the interplay of Edwardian critiques of scientific materialism with New Age ideas about the mind, psyche, and spirituality. That is not to suggest that Uranianism offered an "alternative" (homo)sexuality that was disentangled from pathological discourses; on the contrary, the Uranian discourses implicitly consolidated the "homosexual type." Tracing the genealogy of Uranian sexuality through three case studies illuminates a modern moment when reformers attempted to create fluid sexualities. We find that Uranianism complicates our understandings about the supposedly dominant role of medical-scientific discourses in the construction of early twentieth-century British (homo)sexuality.
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Öberg, Katarina. "On Conditions of Swedish Women’s Sexual Well-Being : An Epidemiological Approach." Doctoral thesis, Uppsala University, Department of Neuroscience, 2005. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-5843.

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Objectives: This descriptive epidemiological dissertation aims to identify conditions of Swedish women’s sexual well-being. The focus is on the relationship between their idiosyncratically reported levels, during the last 12 months, of 5 sexual functions/dysfunctions per se and distressing and their socio-psychological situation, including aspects of their sexual history. Levels of sexual functions/dysfunctions are also related to levels of sexual satisfaction and to other aspects of life satisfaction.

Methods: Data on a randomized cross-sectional national sample of 1335 women aged 18-74 (59% of target sample) were gathered in 1996 using a combination of structured interviews and questionnaires/checklists. Analyses were performed for the total sample or for sub-samples aged 18-65 years. In 3 of the 4 dissertational articles, trichotomies of a 6-grade scale characterizing level of sexual dysfunctions into No/Mild/Manifest dysfunction were used.

Main results: Mild sexual dysfunctions were, generally, much more common than were manifest, and dysfunctional distress was considerably less common than were dysfunctions per se. All dysfunctions, and in particular orgasmic dysfunction, were closely associated with level of sexual well-being. Four factors independently pair-wise linking levels of dysfunctions per se with levels of distressful dysfunction were identified. These were Sexual interest/Desire, Genital function (lubrication and dyspareunia), Orgasm, Vaginismus. Three of these (not vaginismus) were powerful classificators of gross level of sexual well-being. Many of socio-demographic and socio-psychological contextual life-conditions were significantly associated with the different sexual functions/dysfunctions. However, the most prominent contextual variables were satisfaction with partner relationship and partner’s levels of sexual functions.

In conclusion, many different socio-psychological aspects must be taken into account to optimize treatment modalities and resources when dealing with women’s sexual dysfunction in order to secure a good level of sexual well-being.

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Books on the topic "Sexology"

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Eicher, Wolf, Götz Kokott, Hermann-J. Vogt, Volker Herms, and Reinhard Wille, eds. Sexology. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-73794-7.

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Wolf, Eicher, and Kockott G, eds. Sexology. Springer-Verlag, 1988.

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Bauer, Heike. English Literary Sexology. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230234086.

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Giami, Alain, and Sharman Levinson, eds. Histories of Sexology. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-65813-7.

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Forde, Kate, and Honor Beddard. The Institute of Sexology. Wellcome Collection, part of the Wellcome Trust, 2014.

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Josy, Lévy Joseph, and Dupras André 1945-, eds. Questions de sexualité au Québec. Liber, 2008.

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T, Francoeur Robert, ed. The complete dictionary of sexology. Continuum, 1995.

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1944-, Bianco Fernando, Haroian Loretta 1933-, Wagner Gorm, and Institute for Advanced Study of Human Sexuality., eds. International who's who in sexology. Specific Press, 1986.

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Ado, Gustave Firmin. Macro-sexology: Sex sweet sour. Pentland Press, 1998.

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Nersisyan, N. R. Clinical sexology: Handout on clinical sexology for foreign students of general medicine faculty. YSMU, 2008.

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Book chapters on the topic "Sexology"

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Barker, Meg. "Sexology." In Encyclopedia of Critical Psychology. Springer New York, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-5583-7_280.

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Waters, Chris. "Sexology." In Palgrave Advances in the Modern History of Sexuality. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230501805_3.

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Potts, M. "Reproductive Behavior and Family Planning." In Sexology. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-73794-7_1.

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Schätzler, T. G. "Contraception with the Diaphragm: A 2-Year Follow-up Study." In Sexology. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-73794-7_10.

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Kothari, P., D. Pardanani, B. Parulkar, R. Patel, A. Sheth, and N. Parekh. "A Study of The Acceptability of Vasectomy in India." In Sexology. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-73794-7_11.

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Kremer, J. "Sexual Behavior and Female Fertility." In Sexology. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-73794-7_12.

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Comhaire, F. H., T. Farley, and P. Rowe. "Sterility and Sexuality from the Andrologist’s Standpoint." In Sexology. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-73794-7_13.

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Deichert, U., and W. Krause. "Diagnosis and Treatment of Marital Infertility Due To Sperm Antibodies." In Sexology. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-73794-7_14.

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Brand, H. J. "The Influence of Sex Differences on the Acceptance of Infertility." In Sexology. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-73794-7_15.

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Wetterauer, U. "Anatomy of the Penis and Physiology of Erection." In Sexology. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-73794-7_16.

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Conference papers on the topic "Sexology"

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BELLUSSI, GERMANO. "THE SEXOLOGY APPROACH IN ANOREXIA." In IX World Congress of Psychiatry. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789814440912_0142.

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2

Taranets, V., та I. Fedotova. "НАМ МЕШАЮТ ЛЮБИТЬ СТАРЫЕ РАНЫ ПРЕДКОВ". У ПЕРВЫЙ МЕЖКОНТИНЕНТАЛЬНЫЙ ЭКСТЕРРИТОРИАЛЬНЫЙ КОНГРЕСС «ПЛАНЕТА ПСИХОТЕРАПИИ 2022: ДЕТИ. СЕМЬЯ. ОБЩЕСТВО. БУДУЩЕЕ». Crossref, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.54775/ppl.2022.16.66.001.

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The objective of the article is the male-female relationships within the frame of a new research concept of Rodology and the Dokuchaevs’ Rodology Method of Counselling (RMC), and its intersection with sexology. The paper describes and provides results of integrative approach of RMC and sexology in solving a specific counselling case on the issues of sexual relationships. В статье рассматривается тема отношений между мужчиной и женщиной в концепции нового научного направления Родология и родологического метода консультирования Докучаевых (РМК) и соотнесение этой темы с аспектами сексологии. Представлено описание и результаты интегративного подхода РМК и сексологии в решении конкретного консультативного случая по вопросам сексуальных отношений.
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3

Bhattacharya, Arnav. "Sexology as a Means of Sex Education in Colonial and Early Post-Colonial India." In AERA 2024. AERA, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.3102/ip.24.2141737.

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4

"Gynaecological Sexology as a New Hypothetical Interdisciplinary Science of Disorders of Recreational Function in Women with Gynaecological Diseases." In Congress on mental health meeting the needs of the XXI century. Gorodets, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.22343/mental-health-congress-compendium303-305.

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5

VERONEZ, Rebeca Seraphim, Maria Clara Agrizzi MERGAR, Pâmella Cestari ALVERNAZ, and Wanêssa Lacerda POTON. "RELATO DE EXPERIÊNCIA DE APLICAÇÃO DE TESTES EM CRIANÇAS SOBRE SEXOLOGIA." In Anais da II Jornada Científica de Medicina da Universidade Vila Velha: UVV. Even3, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.29327/16004.1-2.

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6

Moura, Nuno, Daniel Esteves-Sousa, Margarida Fraga, João Facucho-Oliveira, Catarina Laginhas, and Sérgio Pereira. "CHEMSEX: LA FUSIÓN ADICTIVA DE DROGAS, SEXO Y SALUD MENTAL." In 23° Congreso de la Sociedad Española de Patología Dual (SEPD) 2021. SEPD, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.17579/sepd2021o030.

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Introductión e objetivos: Chemsex se define como el uso de ciertas sustancias inmediatamente antes o durante las actividades sexuales para facilitar, prolongar y/o intensificar la experiencia sexual, principalmente por algunas comunidades de hombres que tienen sexo con hombres (HSH). Las sustancias asociadas incluyen catinonas sintéticas, metanfetamina, gamma-butirolactona / gamma-hidroxibutirato, ketamina y fármacos para el trastorno eréctil. La práctica de combinar sustancias psicoactivas y sexo ha aumentado de manera constante con el desarrollo de aplicaciones móviles. El advenimiento de las aplicaciones de geolocalización transformó la forma en que las personas se encuentran y contribuyó al desarrollo de chemsex. Si bien hay mucha evidencia de una mayor prevalencia del VIH, infecciones de transmisión sexual y otras medidas de salud sexual entre los HSH que practican chemsex, ha habido poca investigación sobre los aspectos de la salud mental. Nuestro objetivo es realizar una revisión no sistemática de la literatura sobre el chemsex y los posibles problemas de salud mental asociados. Material e métodos: Se realizó una revisión semiestructurada en Pubmed sobre chemsex y salud mental. Resultados e discussión: En la literatura publicada sobre chemsex, el foco aún se encuentra en las comorbilidades somáticas. Los trastornos mentales como la depresión, la psicosis inducida por sustancias y la adicción también parecen ser una consecuencia importante del chemsex. Existe una necesidad de asesoramiento adaptado a los usuarios de chemsex y sus necesidades, que generalmente no se centra solo en la abstinencia, y que también deba incorporar estrategias de reducción de daños. Conclusiones: Chemsex es un tema complejo que se encuentra en la encrucijada de la sociología, la medicina infecciosa, la adicción y la sexología. Algunos usuarios se involucran en chemsex en busca de desinhibición sexual, otros para abrazar sus preferencias sexuales y otros aún por los efectos de las drogas.
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