Shanghai Daily

Viagra rising: How a little blue pill revolution­ized sex

- Kerry Sheridan

Twenty years ago, a little blue pill called Viagra unleashed a cultural shift in America, making sex possible again for millions of older men and bringing the once-taboo topic of impotence into daily conversati­on. While the sexual improvemen­t revolution brightened up the sex lives of many couples, it largely left out women with a low libido.

About 65 million prescripti­ons have been filled worldwide for the blockbuste­r Pfizer drug approved by the US Food and Drug Administra­tion on March 27, 1998. It was the first pill aimed at helping men get erections.

Suddenly, talk of an amazing drug that could make an older man’s penis hard again was all over the media.

The Viagra boom also coincided with the rise of the Internet and the explosion of online pornograph­y. Ads for Viagra were designed to rename what had been known as “male impotence” as “erectile dysfunctio­n” or ED, a medical condition that could finally be fixed.

Republican senator, military veteran and one-time presidenti­al candidate Bob Dole became the first television spokesman for Viagra, admitting his own fears about erectile dysfunctio­n to the masses.

“It’s a little embarrassi­ng to talk about ED, but it is so important for millions of men and their partners,” he said.

The strategy worked. Before Viagra, men wanted to talk about their erectile problems, and did, but the conversati­ons were awkward and difficult, recalled Elizabeth Kavaler, a urology specialist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York.

“Now, sexuality in general is very out there,” she added. “Sex has become an expected part of our lives as we age. And I am sure Viagra has been a big part of that.”

Viagra has had a “major impact” — on a par with the way antibiotic­s changed the way infections are treated, and how statins became ubiquitous in the fight against heart disease, said Louis Kavoussi, chairman of urology at Northwell Health, a New York-area hospital network.

Viagra’s release also came amid a “sort of a clampdown on physicians interactin­g with companies,” he said. “So this was a perfect medicine to advertise to consumers. It was a lifestyle type of medicine.”

Viagra, or sildenafil citrate, was first developed as a drug meant to treat high blood pressure and angina.

But by 1990, men who took part in early clinical trials discovered its main effect was improving their erections, by boosting blood flow to the penis.

For all its popularity, Viagra is still often misunderst­ood.

“It isn’t an aphrodisia­c,” said Kavoussi. “A lot of men who ask about it say, ‘My wife isn’t very interested in relations.’”

“And I say, ‘Viagra is not going to change that.’”

‘Thanks, Viagra’

In 2000, the comedy show “Saturday Night Live” featured a spoof on ads that showed sexually satisfied men saying, “Thanks, Viagra.”

In it, one actress after another was featured groaning “Thanks, Viagra” as a horny male partner groped her from behind or gripped her in a slowdance. The skit was funny because it reflected a reality few people were talking about.

“We are a very puritanica­l, and I think Viagra has loosened us up,” said Nachum Katlowitz, director of urology and fertility at Staten Island University Hospital. “But for the most part, the women have been left out of the sexual improvemen­t revolution.”

Pfizer finally did include women in its marketing for Viagra in 2014. The commercial­s featured sultry women, speaking directly to the camera, telling men to get themselves a prescripti­on.

In 2015, the FDA approved a pill called Addyi (flibanseri­n), which was cast in the media as the “female Viagra” and was touted as the first libido-enhancing pill for women who experience­d a loss of interest in sex.

The pill was controvers­ial from the start. A kind of anti-depressant, women were warned not to drink alcohol with it. It also cost hundreds of dollars and came with the risk of major side effects like nausea, vomiting and thoughts of suicide.

“It didn’t go over too big,” said Katlowitz.

Valeant Pharmaceut­icals bought Addyi for US$1 billion in 2015 but sold it back to the developer, Sprout Pharmaceut­icals, at a steep discount last year.

Older women’s main problem when it comes to sex is vaginal dryness that accompanie­s menopause and can make sex painful. Solutions tend to include hormones, or laser treatments that revitalize the vagina.

They are just beginning to grow in popularity, but still cost hundreds to thousands of dollars, said Kavaler.

“We are at least 20 years behind men,” she said.

For Katlowitz, Viagra was a prime example of “the greed of the pharmaceut­ical industry.”

Viagra cost about US$15 per pill when it first came out, and rose to more than US$50. Last year the price per pill finally went down to less than US$1.

“There was absolutely no reason to charge US$50 a pill,” said Katlowitz. “It was just that they could, so they did.”

 ??  ?? Above is a Chinese doctor holds the anti-impotence drug Viagra at a hospital in Shanghai. Twenty years ago, this little blue pill unleashed a cultural shift in America, making sex possible again for millions of older men. — AFP
Above is a Chinese doctor holds the anti-impotence drug Viagra at a hospital in Shanghai. Twenty years ago, this little blue pill unleashed a cultural shift in America, making sex possible again for millions of older men. — AFP

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