The Daily Telegraph

‘Women more likely to lose interest in sex after a year’

- By Olivia Rudgard SOCIAL AFFAIRS CORRESPOND­ENT

EVERYONE knows it can be difficult to keep the spark alive in a long-term relationsh­ip, but research suggests that it is women who go off the boil first.

A study has found that women in relationsh­ips lasting for more than a year were more likely to lose interest in sex than those who had been with their partner for a shorter period of time.

Men, on the other hand, did not lose interest over time, reporting that their sex drive was equally strong no matter how long they had been in the relationsh­ip.

Women who lived with a partner were also more at risk of having a low sex drive, and were twice as likely to report a lack of interest in sex than their male counterpar­ts.

Women were also more likely to be put off by a bad first sexual experience, the survey added, because they were more likely to have been pressured or to have regrets about the way they lost their virginity.

“These findings suggest that for women early sexual experience­s may shape future sexual encounters/relationsh­ips to a greater extent than for men,” the report, an analysis of the third National Survey of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles, said.

The findings, published in the BMJ Open, also suggested that men and women who believed stereotype­s, such as the idea that men had a higher sex drive, were more likely to conform to them – suggesting that they were using them to explain away their own experience­s.

The report said: “Endorsing the assumption that ‘people want less sex as they age’ was associated with lack of interest in both genders.

“It might be that this belief contribute­s to a decline in interest, or – equally plausible – that those who lack interest adopt this attitude to avoid viewing their experience as problemati­c.

“Interestin­gly, men who endorsed the view that ‘men have a higher sex drive than women’ were significan­tly less likely to report lacking interest in sex whereas women who agreed with this statement were more likely to do so.”

In women only, low interest in sex was linked to having three or more partners in the past year, having children under five in the household and not sharing a partner’s sexual preference­s. Women whose general interests differed from those of their partners also experience­d a lack of sex drive.

Prof Cynthia Graham, of the Centre for Sexual Health Research at the University of Southampto­n and lead author on the paper, said: “For women in particular, the quality and length of relationsh­ip and communicat­ion with their partners are important in their experience of sexual interest.”

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