SEXUAL HEALTH NEWS


Sexual Health

Newly homeless youth likelier to engage in risky sex

 
Newly homeless youth likelier to engage in risky sexWashington, Jan 7: Researchers at the UCLA AIDS Institute have found that newly homeless youth are likelier to indulge in risky sexual behaviour.

Daily alcohol increases sexual arousal, decreases inhibitions in males

 
Daily alcohol increases sexual arousal, decreases inhibitions in malesWashington, Jan: Researchers at the Penn Sate have discovered that daily alcohol use can change male sexual behaviour, in terms of sexual arousal, sexual inhibition, and sexual preferences.

Sex hormones in the womb may cause anorexia

 
Sex HarmonesLondon, Dec 31: The reason behind anorexia could be the sex hormones in the womb, says a new study.
Researchers contemplate that some mothers might overproduce oestrogen, which affects the baby’s brain, making it susceptible to the eating disorder.

One in five Brit men admit paying for sex: Survey

 
Paying SexLondon, Dec 25: A new online survey has revealed that almost one in five British men pay for sex.
More than 6,000 Radio 5 live listeners responded to the ‘Confessions’ survey for the channel’s breakfast show, reports the Sun.
In the survey, 40 per cent of adults in relationships reported that they cheat on their partners - with women more likely to have an affair and men more tempted by a one-night stand.

Like humans, monkeys too will pay for sex

 
Washington, Dec 20 : Humans aren’t the only primates when it comes paying for sexual services, for a new study has found that monkeys too fall in the category.
Michael Gumert, a researcher at Division of Psychology at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, has shown that male longtailed macaques exchange grooming for the right to mate with females whose fur they cleaned.
The study presents the first proof that a "social market" influences sexual interaction in a non-human primate.

Heating up boosts male bugs’ chances of sex

 
Sydney, Dec 19: Heating up boosts male bugs’ chances of sexMale ambush bugs boost their chances of sex through a hot and heated mechanism, a new study has revealed.
The ambush bug (Phymata americana) are known for camouflaging themselves against flowers, waiting to trap prey.
The predatory insects are mostly yellow with dark brown or black patches, with the males having darker heads as well as thoraxes than females.

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