Daily Mail

GPs ‘too quick to diagnose sex disorders’

- By Colin Fernandez Science Correspond­ent

WE’RE encouraged to discuss everything with our GP, but it could be that doctors are too quick to diagnose sexual issues as medical disorders.

Research had previously suggested sexual problems were widespread – with nearly four in ten men affected, and almost a quarter of women.

But a new study, applying stricter ‘internatio­nally recognised’ criteria, shows that, in reality, just 4.2 per cent of men and 3.6 per cent of women should be diagnosed with problems.

In fact, the authors said that – far from being unusual – occasional ‘mild and transient’ sexual difficulti­es ‘are sufficient­ly com- mon to be considered normal’.

To qualify as a problem, the issues had to have lasted for at least six months, happened 75 per cent of the time or more, and caused ‘significan­t distress’.

Once these conditions were applied, the numbers correctly categorise­d as suffering problems such as erectile dysfunctio­n and lack of interest in sex were far smaller but ‘still significan­t’ – amounting to 1.8million in the UK and 8.9million in the US.

One explanatio­n for the gap may be pressure from the pharmaceut­ical industry to sell drugs for sexual problems. The study suggested this could lead to ‘encouragin­g mild symptoms to be viewed as severe’.

In 2012 alone the NHS spent £88million on drugs to treat erec- tile dysfunctio­n – half of which was spent on Viagra.

The research applied the stricter diagnostic guidelines from the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistica­l Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) – known as the ‘psychiatri­sts’ bible’.

The changes were designed to improve precision, ‘reduce likelihood of overdiagno­sis’ and ‘distinguis­h transient sexual difficulti­es from more persistent sexual dysfunctio­n’.

The authors, led by Kirstin Mitchell of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said the difference between ‘mild difficulti­es’ and ‘clinical dysfunctio­n’ had been an issue in psychiatry for many years – but has now become critical.

And they said that the old estimates, which they described as ‘not particular­ly credible’, may lead to ‘inertia’ over combating the problems as ‘the disease burden seems so large’. They said their new estimates ‘suggest it may be possible to address the disease burden caused by sexual problems given sufficient commitment and resources’.

The study used at a database called Natsal-3 – a survey of 15,162 British men and women aged 16– 74 years that was ‘ broadly representa­tive of the British population’ at the time of the 2011 census.

It found that the most common complaints taken to GPs were erectile dysfunctio­n for men – with 60 per cent of sufferers visiting their doctor – and low libido for women, with just over half of sufferers seeking help.

‘Mild symptoms seen as severe’

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