Older adults who value sexual activity and engage in it have better
social lives and psychological well-being, according to a small study in
Scotland.
Older adults said "they miss and want to engage in sexual behaviors,
whether that be a kiss to intercourse," said study coauthor Taylor-Jane
Flynn in an email. "For many, these behaviors remained an important
element in their life."
Flynn, a psychology PhD candidate at Glasgow Caledonian University,
said the study was inspired by her work as a health care assistant for
elderly people.
Although quality of life is a key consideration for older adults,
sexuality is rarely studied, write Flynn and Alan Gow, an associate
professor of psychology at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, in the
journal Age and Ageing.
The researchers recruited 133 Scottish adults aged 65 and over by
distributing questionnaires at local clubs, small businesses and older
people’s groups.
About half the participants lived with a spouse or partner.
The questionnaire asked how often in the last six months participants
had engaged in six sexual behaviors: touching/holding hands,
embracing/hugging, kissing, mutual stroking, masturbation and
intercourse.
Participants also rated how important those behaviors are to them, on
a five-point scale ranging from “not at all important” to “very
important.”
Additionally, the questionnaires assessed participants’ quality of
life based on physical health, psychological health, social
relationships and environment.
Between 75 and 89 percent said they'd engaged in kissing, hugging and
holding hands or touching. Men and women scored about the same for
frequency and importance of sexual behaviors overall, and for quality of
life.
Although people with frequent sexual activity also placed higher
importance on it, the analysis found the two measures were associated
with different aspects of quality of life.
Participants reporting more frequent sexual behavior rated their
social relationships as higher quality, while people who found sexual
activity to be important had higher scores for psychological quality of
life.
Overall, however, seniors’ health status had the strongest impact on all aspects of quality of life.
John DeLamater, a sociology professor at the University of Wisconsin –
Madison, said the fact that participants were recruited in community
settings - which may attract more healthy and active older people -
might affect the results.
“If they are generally healthier (which the results show to be
associated with quality of life), they are probably more sexually
active,” DeLamater said in an email.
For people who have valued sexuality throughout their lives, he
noted, “continuing activity provides protection against a sense of aging
and loss, and of continuity if the person is in a long-term
relationship.” That may explain the links between sex and well-being
found in the study, he said.
While the current study only looked at associations and cannot
determine whether sexuality raises quality of life, Gow noted, he hopes
that future research will focus more on this subject.
“What we hope is that our current findings encourage other
researchers interested in the determinants of health and well-being in
older adults to also consider sexual behaviors,” Gow said in an email.
The sexuality of older people should be considered and encouraged,
DeLamater said. “We should encourage couples to spend time alone,
provide arrangements in care facilities that enable sexual intimacy,
provide sexual health information in medical settings.”
http://www.foxnews.com/health/2015/08/03/for-seniors-sexual-activity-is-linked-to-higher-quality-life/
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