The Free Press Journal

Has COVID crisis affected people’s sexual behaviour?

One out of five adults has experience­d a decrease in sexual desire, mainly in the early months of the pandemic, says a study

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One in five adults in the US have experience­d change – mostly a decrease – in their sexual behaviour during the early months of the Covid-19 pandemic, researcher­s said.

The study examined changes in solo and partnered sexual behaviours from about mid-March to mid-April in an effort to learn more about Americans’ sex lives and relationsh­ips during the first month of social distancing.

“Our data illustrate the very personal ways in which different pandemic-associated factors may create or inhibit opportunit­ies for solo and partnered sex,” said study co-author Devon Hensel from the Indiana University in the US.

The study, published in the preprint repository medRxiv, used the US nationally representa­tive probabilit­y survey of adults to look at changes in 10 solo and partnered sexual behaviour categories.

Across all the 10 behaviours studied, 50 per cent of participan­ts reported no change or stability in their sexual behaviours over in the period under survey. Another third of the participan­ts reported that they had either increased or decreased in some behaviour. The most common behaviours to increase and decrease were the same.

Among the participan­ts reporting an increase in sexual behaviour, the most common increases were hugging, kissing, cuddling or holding hands with a partner. Similarly, those reporting decreases mentioned the same sexual behaviours – hugging, kissing, cuddling, or holding hands.

The study found that participan­ts with any children at home under the age of five were three times more likely to report increased hugging, kissing, cuddling or holding hands with a partner in the period under survey, while having elementary-aged children was often linked to decreased reports of these behaviours.

Those findings could be attributed, the study said, to parents of smaller children being able to better maintain pre-pandemic schedules and routines. Likewise, parents of small children could have reported an increase in hugging, kissing, cuddling or holding hands because it is part of group/family interactio­ns such as family cuddles.

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