A recent study published in the Journal of Sexual Medicine focuses on
how sexual orientation associates with orgasm frequency in single men
and women.
Researchers collected responses via a 2011 online questionnaire from
6,151 men and women between the ages of 21 and 65. They then only
analyzed those response of a smaller subsample of 2,850 singles —
including 1,497 men and 1,353 women — who had sex within the past 12
months.
Participants were asked to identify their gender, sexual orientation and
percentage of time they orgasm with a familiar partner on a scale of
zero to 100.
Although responses from the male participants did not vary much based
on sexual orientation — heterosexual men reported an 85.5 percent orgasm
rate, gay men 84.7 percent, and bisexual men 77.6 percent — responses
from women showed notable variation. While heterosexual women reported
orgasming 61.6 percent of the time and bisexual women reported 58
percent, lesbian women had the highest orgasm rate at 74.7 percent.
In the study text, the researchers posit the higher lesbian percentage
could be attributed to factors such as “self-identified lesbian women
are more comfortable and familiar with the female body and thus, on
average, are better able to induce orgasm in their female partners.”
Other reasonings include: length of the sexual encounter, attitude
towards gender, sexual roles during intercourse and possible hormonal
differences.
Author Justin R. Garcia, MS, PhD, who is an assistant professor of
gender studies and a director at the Kinsey Institute at Indiana
University, explained the implications of the findings further in an
email to The Huffington Post.
“Little is known about orgasm occurrences among women and men of varied
sexual orientations across the adult lifespan,” he said. “Understanding
the factors that influence variation in orgasm occurrence among sexual
minority populations may assist in tailoring behavioral therapies for
those of different sexual orientations.”
Such a study could offer better insight into better orgasms for all couples, he said.
“Moreover, to the extent that lack of orgasm is seen as a common and
unwanted problem, learning more about orgasm in same-sex relationships
may inform treatment for men and women in both same-sex and mixed-sex
relationships. Consequently, these findings may contribute to promotion
of a more informed and positive sexual health care.”
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