Research has shown that day-in and day-out stresses negatively impact sexual functioning for both men and women. A 2014 study confirms these findings, and has explored the connection further, showing that daily stressors predict lower levels of sexual satisfaction for men and women, as well as sexual activity for women. The study was conducted by Lisa Hamilton, an expert on human sexuality and stress, at Canada’s Mount Allison University.
Interestingly, her research found that financial stressors as well as stressors related to low socioeconomic status were associated with sexual interference among women but not men. She also found that women’s sexual functioning was more strongly affected by stress and depression than men’s scores.
In an earlier 2013 study with women, Hamilton found that higher levels of chronic stress related to lower levels of genital sexual arousal (not, however, of psychological arousal) and higher levels of cortisol, the stress hormone. Elevated cortisol, it turns out, inhibits testosterone, which is not only important to men but also to women because lower testosterone can impair both psychological and genital arousal.
References:
- Hamilton LD. The Affects of Acute and Chronic Stress on Sexual Arousal in Women. PhD diss., University of Texas at Austin, 2010.
- Hamilton LD & Julian AM. The Relationship Between Daily Hassles and Sexual Function in Men and Women. J Sex Marital Ther. 2014;40(5):379-395.
- Hamilton LD & Meston CM. Chronic Stress and Sexual Function in Women. J Sex Med. 2013;10(10):2443-54.
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