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- In an adolescent period characterized by identity development and formation, sexting should not be considered equivalent to childhood sexual assault, molestation, and date rape.
- The rise of artificial intelligence (AI) has transformed various aspects of our lives, from customer service to entertainment.
- The questionnaire was developed collaboratively by the I-SHARE consortium [15].
In addition to the aforementioned legal ramifications and potential for bullying, sexting may be a risk factor for or an indicator of risky sexual behaviors. Given the lack of previous studies, it is unclear how this new behavior fits within the domain of teen dating and sexual behaviors. First, we identify the prevalence and describe the nature of sexting (as sender and receiver) among a large ethnically diverse school-based sample of adolescents. While the novelty of this topic prevents us from making specific empirically guided hypotheses, we anticipate that sexting behaviors will differ by sex, be an extension of teens’ lives, and will co-occur with their intimate (dating) and sexual (intercourse and risky sex) behaviors. Particular attention should be given to COVID-19’s impact on LGBT people’s sexuality.
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- Women more than men avoided sexual closeness with their partner because of concerns about spreading COVID-19, were more likely to think they could be infected during sexual intercourse, and took precautions like using condoms.
- Given these results, future research should define more closely what is meant by being bothered (eg, annoyed vs embarrassed).
- Other individual and couple protective factors to maintain mental health during the pandemic included problem-solving skills, positive reappraisal, self-efficacy, intimate partnership, social integration and mindfulness [35–37].
- Of all the participants, 55.9% were female; and the race/ethnicity makeup of the analyzed sample was 26.6% African American, 30.3% white, and 31.7% Hispanic.
A large proportion of the present sample (46.5%) reported low sexual satisfaction. Similar findings were also found in other I-SHARE countries where, overall, 39.6% reported low sexual satisfaction [19]. This demonstrates the need for health professionals to address sexual and reproductive health issues during the COVID-19 pandemic and the importance of sexual health for general health and wellbeing.
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Moreover, encouraging people to trying new sexual activities with their partner can be useful to cope with a stressful situation and to improve the couple’s sexual life. Special attention should be paid to categories mostly at risk of negative outcomes such as women and LGBT+ people, as well as individuals at risk for maladaptive use of sexting or pornography. Interventions to these latter risks should be focused on raising awareness on individual’s own coping responses and on the implementation of functional coping strategies. In a survey conducted on a sample aged 18 or older living in Australia, participants were asked about their sexual lives during all of 2019 and the period after March 22, coinciding with the lockdown period (Coombe et al., 2021). Responders reported a median of one sexual partner in both time windows considered but 89.8% said they had sex in 2019 while 60.3% said they had sex during lockdown. Only 14.3% of participants affirmed that they were having more sex during lockdown vs. the remaining participants (53.5%) who suggested a decrease in sex frequency.
Moreover, GBMSM reported no changes or an increase in the number of casual sexual partners (Sanchez et al., 2020; Shilo and Mor, 2020a; Stephenson et al., 2020). It is possible that men are just looking at the perceived lower likelihood of transmission through sex, underestimating the threat of being in close physical contact. Furthermore, the lack of effective vaccine and medical treatment and the distressing news make people feel more threatened by having sex with a partner affected by COVID-19 than HIV (Shilo and Mor, 2020a). Interestingly, health workers compared to others were more likely to experience the fear of infecting their partners. The greater possibility to be infected and the tendency to protect their loved ones may have led to maintaining distance from their partners, leaving home or living in a separated room, and, consequently, to a reduction in sexual intercourse frequency (Baran and Aykac, 2021).
Despite these limitations, this study contributes to the literature on sexual behavior during COVID-19, and the results indicate the importance of continuing research to support policy and help care provision. From a research and policy perspective, longitudinal assessments of the population are needed to properly identify their health needs. On a care provision level, sexual and mental health professionals should be trained and updated to face the population’s new demands with reference to sexual behaviors and satisfaction during times of crises such as infectious disease outbreaks.
Moreover, during the pandemic, an increase in sexual experimentations was found. People who lived with their partners during the pandemic were more likely to try new sexual activities involving partners like new sexual positions and acting out sexual fantasies, than people who lived alone. On the opposite side, those who lived alone reported higher rates of virtually and technology-based behaviors (Lehmiller et al., 2020). Nonetheless, only trying new sexual activities with a partner, but not common technology-based additions, were related to improvements in sexual lives. The most common increased behavior among participants was hugging, kissing, holding hands, or cuddling with a main partner (21.5%), and the least common behaviors to increase were sex with a casual partner (5.8%) and performing or watching sexual acts over the internet (5.5%).
These same studies also demonstrated increased solo masturbation, while research from Australia (Coombe et al., 2021) demonstrated a decline in solo masturbation. Canadian work observed that solo masturbation decreased over time among adults without a romantic live-in partner (Brotto et al., 2022). Research from the United States demonstrated that one in ten adults participated in mutual masturbation, oral sex, and vibrator use less frequently (Hensel et al., 2023). Two recent systematic reviews of sexual frequency during COVID-19 also generally support reduced activity (Delcea et al., 2021; Masoudi et al., 2022).
On the other side, during the pandemic, some people, mainly those living with their partners, found an increase in the frequency of sexual intercourse (Coombe et al., 2021; Wignall et al., 2021). Some others said they had engaged in group sex, swinging, or threesomes since lockdown began, compared with 2019 (Coombe et al., 2021). Panzeri et al. (2020) found that people who spent more time with their partners and felt less stress and more bored also experienced an increase in sexual desire, arousal, orgasm, and frequency of sex. In an adolescent period characterized by identity development and formation, sexting should not be considered equivalent to childhood sexual assault, molestation, and date rape. Doing so not only unjustly punishes youthful indiscretions, but minimizes the severity and seriousness of true sexual assault against minors.