Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Sexual dysfunction in primary medical care: prevalence, characteristics and detection by the general practitioner

248

Citations

14

References

1997

Year

TLDR

Few data exist on sexual dysfunction prevalence in primary care, and many cases remain hidden from general practitioners. The study aimed to determine whether predictors in patient notes could aid GPs in identifying patients with serious sexual problems. A questionnaire survey of 170 patients at a general practice assessed prevalence, characteristics, and GP detection rates, including indicators recorded in patient notes. Among participants, 35 % of men and 42 % of women reported sexual dysfunction, general dissatisfaction affected 75 % of men and 68 % of women, yet only 2 % of cases were documented in GP notes, confirming a high prevalence and under‑recognition.

Abstract

Despite the recent focus on sexual behaviour and AIDs, there are almost no data on the prevalence of sexual dysfunction within primary care settings.One hundred and seventy patients attending a general practice participated in a questionnaire survey of the prevalence and characteristics of sexual problems. The detection rate of the general practitioners (GPs) and indicators in the patient notes were also investigated.Thirty five per cent of the men (n = 22) reported some form of specific sexual dysfunction: premature ejaculation was identified in 31 per cent of the men; 17 per cent experienced erectile dysfunction, which was associated with current medication, a high mean annual attendance and increasing age. The prevalence of sexual dysfunction in the women was 42 per cent (n = 41); vaginismus was reported by 30 per cent of the sample; 23 per cent of the women suffered from anorgasmia. General sexual dissatisfaction was more common than specific dysfunction; 68 per cent (n = 66) of the women and 75 per cent (n = 54) of the men reported at least one problem with dissatisfaction, avoidance, infrequency or non-communication. The large majority of the sample (70 per cent) considered sexual matters to be an appropriate topic for the GP to discuss. Despite this, sexual problems were recorded in only 2 per cent of the GP notes.This study confirms the high prevalence of sexual disorders in the population. Many of these problems are concealed from GPs. Predictors in patients' notes could help GPs to detect those patients with more serious problems.

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