The Free Press Journal

Sexting not bad for your relationsh­ip

The recent analysis of research into how so-called “sexting” may affect sexual behaviour finds that it has little impact on love life

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It may be considered as the new ‘first base,’ but according to a recent study, there’s not much to worry about sexting. The recent analysis of research into how so-called “sexting” may affect sexual behaviour finds that it has little impact on sexual activity, but highlights significan­t shortcomin­gs in the research itself.

“There’s a lot of work being done on the phenomenon of sexting and how it may influence sexual behaviour, but the work is being done in a wide variety of population­s by researcher­s from many different background­s,” said lead author Kami Kosenko from the North Carolina State University. “We wanted to analyse this broad body of work to see what, if anything, can be gleaned from all of these studies.”

The researcher­s found 234 journal articles that looked at sexting, but then removed studies that didn’t look at the relationsh­ip between sexting and behaviour, as well as any studies that didn’t include clearly defined quantitati­ve measures of sexting or sexual behaviour. Ultimately, this process winnowed it down to 15 studies that looked at whether there was any link between sexting and: sexual activity; unprotecte­d sex; and/or the number of sex partners one has.

The researcher­s found that there was a weak statistica­l relationsh­ip between sexting and all of those categories – and that was when looking solely at correlatio­n. It was impossible to tell if sexting actually influenced behaviour at all.

In fact, there’s not even an agreed-upon definition for sexting. Does sexting consist only of sexually-oriented text messages? Does it include photos? Video? Definition­s varied widely from paper to paper.

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