Traditions and contradictions of sexual function definitions for portuguese heterosexual men and women: medicalization and socially constructed gender effects


Autoria(s): Alarcão, Violeta; Machado, Fernando Luís; Giami, Alain
Data(s)

16/08/2016

16/08/2016

2015

Resumo

© 2015 College of Sexual and Relationship Therapists

Research on how sexual changes are understood as dysfunctions versus normal change remains scarce, namely in societies where traditional gender roles persist among the growing diversity of sexual relationships and practices. This article discusses controversies on sexual function definitions through sociology of diagnosis and sexual scripting theoretical frameworks, drawing on 313 structured interviews with primary healthcare users of the Greater Lisbon area, followed by in-depth interviews with a subsample of 25 heterosexual men and women. The low level of agreement found between the scores of the most widely used instruments for sexual function evaluation in epidemiology studies and self-diagnosis may be understood as a challenge for the predominant biomedical model and a need to re-conceptualize sexual dysfunctions other than as organic dysfunctions, with implications for both research and practice. Results show that individuals not only challenge illness concepts and sexual dysfunction diagnoses and their treatments, as they also construct sexual problems based on their impacts in daily life. Demonstrating the permanence of traditional social scripts that operate in the definitions of sexual function is one way to understand gender as an embodied social structure and get adequate practice to the problem, particularly in the Portuguese society where sexuality remains highly gendered.

Identificador

Sexual and Relationship Therapy, Volume 31, 2016 - Issue 3

1468-1994

http://hdl.handle.net/10451/24591

10.1080/14681994.2015.1088643

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Taylor & Francis

Relação

http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/csmt20/current

Direitos

restrictedAccess

Palavras-Chave #Sexual dysfunctions #Self-diagnosis #Diagnostic tools #Gender differences #Portugal
Tipo

article