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The data come from responses to a 186-item questionnaire that was included as an insert in the March 1995 issue of The Advocate, a national newsmagazine for gay, lesbian and bisexual men and women. The sample of 6,935 self-identified lesbians who returned the questionnaire responded to items asking about their sexual experience with men and about their history of STD testing and diagnosis. Respondents were also asked to provide information on their social and demographic characteristics, including race or ethnicity, age, annual income, educational attainment and population size of their community. Researchers performed multivariate logistic regression analyses (with the variables that proved significant in bivariate analyses) to determine which factors independently affected women's likelihood of ever having had vaginal intercourse, of having had sexual intercourse without a condom and of having had a male sexual partner in the previous year.


Six percent of the sample had had sex with a male partner in the past year. Some 77% had ever had a male sexual partner, and 71% had had penile-vaginal intercourse; while the first of these proportions varied significantly by the respondent's race, age, education and community size, the latter varied significantly by all five characteristics under study. The proportion ever having had intercourse without a condom--64%--also varied significantly by each characteristic, except for community size. One-sixth of the women (17%) had ever had anal intercourse, and a similar proportion (16%) had ever done so without a condom; the proportion ever having had anal intercourse differed significantly by the respondent's age, education and community size, and the proportion ever having had unprotected anal intercourse varied by these same three characteristics, plus income.


In the multivariate analyses, the variables that independently raised lesbians' likelihood of having had a male sexual partner within the past year were young age, low income, nonwhite race and not having graduated from college. For example, respondents younger than 25 were 6.7 times as likely as those older than 50 to have had a male partner in the past year; lesbians with an annual income of less than $20,000 were 1.5 times as likely as those who made more than $50,000 to have done so; nonwhites were 1.4 times as likely as whites to have had a recent male partner; and non-college graduates were also 1.4 times as likely as graduates of a professional school to have had a male sexual partner in the past year.


Advocate readers who had not graduated from college were significantly more likely than those with a postgraduate degree to have ever had heterosexual intercourse (odds ratio, 1.5). Lesbians younger than 50 were significantly less likely than older women to have done so (0.4-0.7); respondents who lived in either rural areas or in cities of fewer than one million inhabitants also had a reduced likelihood of having had heterosexual sex (0.8).


Among respondents with a history of vaginal intercourse, women younger than 25 were substantially less likely than those older than 50 to have ever had heterosexual intercourse without a condom (odds ratio, 0.2); those aged 25-50 also had reduced odds of having had unprotected vaginal intercourse (0.5). Respondents who had not graduated from college had slightly elevated odds of having had penile-vaginal intercourse without a condom (1.6). This analysis also took into account the number of male partners a woman had had, and the results are dramatic. Compared with respondents who had had sex with only one man, those who had had 2-5 male partners were 2.3 times as likely, and those who had had six or more male partners were 11.2 times as likely, to have had unprotected penile-vaginal sex.


Lesbian Partner Violence Fact Sheet Suzana Rose, Ph.D. National Violence Against Women Prevention Research Center University of Missouri at St. Louis What is lesbian partner violence? Partner violence in lesbian (and gay) relationships recently has been identified as an important social problem. Partner or domestic violence among lesbians has been defined as including physical, sexual and psychological abuse, although researchers have most often studied physical violence. How common is lesbian partner violence? About 17-45% of lesbians report having been the victim of a least one act of physical violence perpetrated by a lesbian partner (1,5,6,13). Types of physical abuse named by more than 10% of participants in one study included:


According to psychologist and scholar Letitia Anne Peplau, research studies have shown that women show less interest in sex compared to men and "lesbians report having sex less often than gay men or heterosexuals." Women in general were found to be "more willing than men to forgo sex or adhere to religious vows of celibacy".[18] However, according to Peplau, the "available empirical database on homosexuals is relatively small"; additionally, "an adequate understanding of human sexuality may require separate analyses of sexuality in women ... based on the unique biology and life experiences" of the female sex, because researchers have "ignored activities, such as intimate kissing, cuddling, and touching, that may be uniquely important to women's erotic lives."[18] Researchers have argued that "more attention must be paid to the impact of hormones that may have special relevance for women" and which are "linked to both sexuality and affectional bonding".[18]


Various scholars and writers have called lesbian bed death a myth.[6][7][23][24] Nikki Dowling of The Frisky argued that the definition of sexual activity back in the 1980s was mainly limited to penile-vaginal sex, and that this has affected lesbians' definition of sex since some wonder if two women having sex is a valid act. She surmised that lesbian bed death "is probably only sticking around" due to lesbophobia.[25] Winnie McCroy of The Village Voice stated, "Although [Schwartz's] methodology and results were later challenged, the idea of lesbian bed death has taken on a life of its own, with damaging results."[25] Dowling also cited a widespread negative effect of the concept, stating that numerous websites claiming they can cure lesbian bed death started to crop up.[25] McCroy argued that all couples get tired of "marathon sex".[23] Sex educator and author Tristan Taormino stated that sex gets old regardless of a couple's sexual orientation.[23] Suzanne Iasenza said, "Read heterosexual sex therapist David Schnarch's work if you don't believe heterosexual couples grapple with similar issues."[14] 2ff7e9595c


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