Tuesday, 23 April, 2024
HomeGerontologyElderly continue to enjoy sex

Elderly continue to enjoy sex

Older people are continuing to enjoy active sex lives well into their seventies and eighties, according to new research from the University of Manchester and NatCen Social Research. More than half (54%) of men and almost a third (31%) of women over the age of 70 reported they were still sexually active, with a third of these men and women having frequent sex – meaning at least twice a month – according to data from the latest wave of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA).

The paper, lead authored by Dr David Lee, an Age UK Research Fellow at the University of Manchester's School of Social Sciences is the first study on sexual health of its kind to include people over the age of 80. It uncovers a detailed picture of the sex lives of older men and women in England, finding that a sizeable minority remain sexually active in their old age. Contrary to popular misconceptions, it finds that overall health and conflicting partnership factors were more closely linked to decreasing sexual activity and functioning, rather than simply increasing age.

Of the more than 7,000 people who responded to the questionnaire, very few (less than 3%) declined to answer direct questions about their sexual activities and problems. Lee said: "This is the first nationally-representative study to include people over the age of 80 when asking older men and women in England about their sexual health. We hope our findings improve public health by countering stereotypes and misconceptions about late-life sexuality, and offer older people a reference against which they may relate their own experiences and expectations."

"Our ongoing research is also highlighting the diversity of late-life sexualities, and trying to impose youthful norms of sexual health on older people would be over-simplistic and even unhelpful. It is however important that health professionals act on this and are more open about discussing sexual health with older people – it can't simply be assumed to be an irrelevance."

Problems most frequently reported by sexually active women related to becoming sexually aroused (32%) and achieving orgasm (27%), while for men it was erectile difficulties (39%).

Chronic health conditions and poor self-rated health seemed to have more obvious negative impacts on the sexual health of men compared to women. Men were more concerned about their sexual activities and function than women and, with increasing age, these concerns tended to become more common. Sexually active women were less dissatisfied with their overall sex lives than men, and also reported decreasing levels of dissatisfaction with increasing age.

The study also found that many septuagenarians and octogenarians were still affectionate towards their partners, with 31% of men and 20% of women reporting frequent kissing or petting. Among those who reported any sexual activity in the past three months, 1% of men and 10% of women reported they felt obligated to have sex.

[link url="http://www.manchester.ac.uk/discover/news/article/?id=13745"]Manchester University release[/link]
[link url="http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10508-014-0465-1"]Archives of Sexual Behaviour abstract[/link]

MedicalBrief — our free weekly e-newsletter

We'd appreciate as much information as possible, however only an email address is required.