Why a biopsychosocial approach is needed when studying the sexual effects of hormonal contraception

E. Elaut
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Approval by the US Food and Drug Administration of the first oral contraceptive (OC) on 9 May 1960 stirred both public and scientific debate. Initially, concerns regarding the sexual effects on women were limited. Even today, despite decades of widespread use of OCs by over 100 million women worldwide, it is astonishing how little we know about the effects of hormonal contraception on women’s sexuality. In the late 1980s, the human reproduction programme of the World Health Organization (WHO) appointed John Bancroft to conduct a series of studies into OC use and sexual health [1–4]. This short paper discusses the three main conclusions of these studies, supplemented by recent additions to the field, to show why research in this area requires a biopsychosocial approach. To be able to put studies on OC use and female sexual desire (also termed sexual interest or sexual motivation) into perspective, we refer to a leading theoretical, biopsychosocial model called the incentive motivation model [5] (Figure 1), in which it is stated that sexual desire, or sexual motivation (in both women and men), is the result of a complex, layered process. According to the model, sexual desire typically emerges when a functional ‘sexual system’ (influenced by receptors, sex steroids, genetic sensitivity, etc.) is activated by an internal or external stimulus that is sexually meaningful to the individual concerned. This stimulus can be visual, olfactory or otherwise, and its valence depends on the sexual memory (attitudes, norms and previous sexual experiences) of the person (Figure 1). For example, some individuals will find a certain smell or sound sexually stimulating, since it reminds them of earlier positive experiences with that smell or sound, in their personal memory associated with a sexual reward. This same stimulus can be experienced as neutral or even negative by another person, depending on the specific associations in that person’s sexual memory [5].
为什么在研究激素避孕的性影响时需要采用生物心理社会方法
1960年5月9日,美国食品和药物管理局批准了第一种口服避孕药(OC),引起了公众和科学界的争论。最初,对妇女的性影响的关注有限。即使在今天,尽管几十年来全世界有超过1亿女性广泛使用避孕药,但令人惊讶的是,我们对激素避孕对女性性行为的影响知之甚少。在20世纪80年代末,世界卫生组织(WHO)的人类生殖规划任命John Bancroft进行了一系列关于OC使用和性健康的研究[1-4]。这篇短文讨论了这些研究的三个主要结论,并辅以该领域最近的新发现,以说明为什么该领域的研究需要生物心理社会方法。为了更好地研究OC的使用和女性性欲(也称为性兴趣或性动机),我们参考了一种领先的理论生物心理社会模型,称为激励动机模型[5](图1),其中指出性欲或性动机(女性和男性)是一个复杂的、分层的过程的结果。根据该模型,当一个功能性的“性系统”(受受体、性类固醇、遗传敏感性等影响)被对相关个体具有性意义的内部或外部刺激激活时,性欲通常就会出现。这种刺激可以是视觉的、嗅觉的或其他的,它的效价取决于这个人的性记忆(态度、规范和以前的性经验)(图1)。例如,有些人会发现某种气味或声音具有性刺激,因为它让他们想起了与性奖励相关的个人记忆中与这种气味或声音有关的早期积极体验。同样的刺激对另一个人来说可能是中性的,甚至是消极的,这取决于那个人的性记忆中的具体联系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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