Analsex Teen
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Analsex Teen
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By
Attia @ Planned Parenthood
|
April 24, 2020, 5:40 p.m.
can anal sex have any long term effects on my body? I’ve heard that it can cause anal leakage later in life, and anal prolapse. is this true?
Anal sex is perfectly healthy and safe in both the long and short term. As with vaginal sex (penis-in-vagina sex), there’s a very small risk of leakage and prolapse (when your pelvic muscles weaken and cause organs to slip down) over the course of a lifetime. Anal sex can also aggravate existing hemorrhoids.
People who have anal sex can follow a few simple guidelines:
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A duo of surgical researchers are urging more clinicians to talk to women about safe anal sex -- particularly for those who feel pressured by their partners to do so.
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8/12/22
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Anal sex isn’t the taboo sex act it used to be — especially among heterosexual women.
Indeed, the most recent statistics provided by the Centers for Disease Control and the National Center for Health Statistics showed that more than a third — 35% — of women aged 15 to 49 have tried anal sex with a male partner.
Those numbers, taken from a survey of more than 5,500 women between 2015 and 2019, are rising — perhaps by a lot, depending on who you ask. A similar survey of 880 “sexually active adults,” conducted by doctor-led butt health brand Future Method, showed that 70% of women have tried anal sex at least once.
In the spirit of a new age of sexual exploration and health awareness, a duo of surgical researchers published an editorial in the BMJ this week, urging more clinicians to talk to women about the potential risks of engaging in anal sex — particularly for those who feel pressured by their partners to do so.
“Clinicians may shy away from these discussions, influenced by society’s taboos,” wrote Tabitha Gana and Lesley Hunt, colorectal and consultant surgeons, respectively, with the UK’s National Health System. “By avoiding these discussions, we may be failing a generation of young women, who are unaware of the risks.”
Physicians and healthcare workers, especially those in primary care and family medicine, “have a duty to acknowledge changes in society around anal sex in young women, and to meet these changes with open neutral and non-judgemental conversations to ensure that all women have the information they need to make informed choices about sex,” the colleagues wrote.
Silence on the albeit sensitive subject, they continued, “exposes women to missed diagnoses, futile treatments, and further harm arising from a lack of medical advice.”
Gana and Hunt referred to a national survey of British women that outlined the top reasons why they’ve tried anal sex, including curiosity and personal pleasure. Unfortunately, for approximately a quarter of women, pressure from their male partners has played a significant role. The US is meanwhile expected to reflect similar trends.
“The pain and bleeding women report after anal sex is indicative of trauma, and risks may be increased if anal sex is coerced,” they wrote.
Anal sex can be safe and enjoyable for many, but the authors warned there are anatomical features to women that bring a different set of risks, such as incontinence, due to their “less robust” sphincter and weaker anal canal muscles compared to men. That’s one reason why women who engage in the act show increased rates of fecal incontinence and anal injury.
The surgeons point out that a majority of medical literature for patients pertaining to anal sex focuses on sexually transmitted illnesses, such as HIV, herpes and HPV — which can lead to certain cancers — but misses the aforementioned physiological risks, as well as the emotional toll of coercion.
In the absence of clinical guidance, women are looking to a “plethora of non-medical or pseudomedical websites to fill the health information void,” some of which “may increase societal pressure to try anal sex,” rather than helping women “make informed decisions,” the authors said.
“Hit television shows such as ‘ Sex and the City ‘ and ‘Fleabag’ may unwittingly add to the pressure, as they seem to normalize anal sex in heterosexual relationships or make it appear racy and daring,” they added.
Beyond shame or stigma, the doctors urge clinicians to overcome the fear of coming off as “judgmental” or even “homophobic” by raising these concerns with patients — insisting there are resources for them to learn how to approach the subject in a conscientious way.
“With better information, women who want anal sex would be able to protect themselves more effectively from possible harm, and those who agree to anal sex reluctantly to meet society’s expectations or please partners, may feel better empowered to say no,” Gana and Hunt conclude.
By
Benjamin Fearnow
@BFearnow21
02/09/18 AT 10:07 AM
© Copyright 2022 IBTimes LLC. All Rights Reserved.
A new study analyzing the sex practices of people ages 16-22 finds that heterosexual teens and young adults are increasingly open to sexual experimentation, with significant increases in often-painful anal and oral sex experiences compared to adolescents in 1990.
The study, " Heterosexual Practices Among Young People in Britain: Evidence From Three National Surveys of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles ," was published in the Journal of Adolescent Health in December. Researchers conducted more than 45,000 interviews of young adults between 2010 and 2012 and found that one-in-four men and one-in-five women report having vaginal, oral and anal sex over the past year. Previous surveys conducted between 1990 and 1991 found that only 1-in-10 young adults had performed all three vaginal, oral and anal sex in the past year.
The study shows a particular increase in vaginal sex engaged in by 16-to 24-year-olds, but the increasing oral and anal sex practices was more most significant among slightly older participants between 19 and 24. Despite a small overall drop in vaginal intercourse among both age groups, the researchers write that oral and anal sex are not "replacing" vaginal sex. The median age of one's very first heterosexual experience of any kind, such as kissing, was 14. The median age for first intercourse (oral, vaginal or anal) among men and women born between 1990 and 1996 was 16 years old.
"[W]e are seeing oral and anal sex joining, rather than replacing, vaginal intercourse in heterosexual repertoires," write the study authors. "Moreover, despite the increasing prevalence of anal intercourse, the low prevalence of reporting recent experience may indicate it is a less regular feature in young people's sexual interactions."
The researchers addressed the gender gap regarding the personal preferences of heterosexual anal sex partners, noting a strong social trend of normalizing often "painful" sexual practices, such as anal intercourse.
Interviews shwoed "repeated engagement in disliked sexual activities (mainly oral-penis contact and anal intercourse) was four times more common among women than men." They also noted, "prominent cultural discourses among teenagers that normalize painful, and sometimes coercive, anal intercourse with men tending to talk more positively about the practice than women."
The researchers acknowledged that despite the large sample size of interviews, same-sex interactions and a "complex socio-sexual landscape" can always skew self-reported sexual habit data. In particular, the increase in anal and oral sex practices should be considered by health officials educating young people.
"Recent decades have seen an earlier age at initiation of partnered sexual experiences and increased diversity in heterosexual practices among young people," write the study co-authors. "Keeping pace with trends in sexual practices is necessary to safeguard young people's health and to support them in increasing their sexual well-being."
The study authors also caution that recent studies and high-profile stories analyzing pornography's effect on young people's sexual habits are still equivocal. Bryant Paul, an associate professor at Indiana University's Media School and author of research on adolescent porn habits, said boys are 13 and girls are 14 when they first view pornography.
Study lead author Dr. Ruth Lewis, who conducted the research at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, said "keeping pace" with current trends in sexual practices is often a difficult task.
"By shedding light on when some young people are having sex and what kinds of sex they are having, our study highlights the need for accurate sex and relationships education that provides opportunities to discuss consent and safety in relation to a range of sexual practices," Ruth writes in a release . "This will equip young people with the information and skills they need to maximise their wellbeing from the outset of their sexual lives."
Researchers at Indiana University’s Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender, and Reproduction conducted surveys of sexual behaviors earlier this year, revealing that one-third of women say they've had anal sex and. Forty-three percent of heterosexual male respondents said they'd had anal sex at least once in their lifetime, while 37 percent of women said they'd been on the receiving end of anal sex at least once .
© Copyright IBTimes 2022. All rights reserved.
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A duo of surgical researchers are urging more clinicians to talk to women about safe anal sex -- particularly for those who feel pressured by their partners to do so.
Shutterstock
Filed under
health
sex
sexual abuse
sexual consent
women's health
8/12/22
This story has been shared 111,046 times.
111,046
This story has been shared 98,642 times.
98,642
This story has been shared 69,701 times.
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Anal sex isn’t the taboo sex act it used to be — especially among heterosexual women.
Indeed, the most recent statistics provided by the Centers for Disease Control and the National Center for Health Statistics showed that more than a third — 35% — of women aged 15 to 49 have tried anal sex with a male partner.
Those numbers, taken from a survey of more than 5,500 women between 2015 and 2019, are rising — perhaps by a lot, depending on who you ask. A similar survey of 880 “sexually active adults,” conducted by doctor-led butt health brand Future Method, showed that 70% of women have tried anal sex at least once.
In the spirit of a new age of sexual exploration and health awareness, a duo of surgical researchers published an editorial in the BMJ this week, urging more clinicians to talk to women about the potential risks of engaging in anal sex — particularly for those who feel pressured by their partners to do so.
“Clinicians may shy away from these discussions, influenced by society’s taboos,” wrote Tabitha Gana and L
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