Lack of sex linked to early death as experts reveal that porn is being used as ‘substitute for intercourse’

A NEW study has found that regular sex can literally be the difference between life and death.
Maintaining a healthy sex life was linked to living longer, according to a new study published by the Public Library of Science’s PLOS One.

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However, this only applied to the men in the study.
Dr. Zhana Vrangalova, a relationship scientist, consultant and associate professor of human sexuality at NYU who was not involved in the study, told The US Sun that it’s pretty obvious “that people who have more sex are happier, healthier and live longer.” .”
“It is also likely that sex, particularly good and pleasurable sex, can further contribute to better physical and mental health,” she said.
“There is enough evidence that regular sex is associated with lower blood pressure and cardiovascular problems, better sleep, better immune system function, a stronger pelvic floor, better mood, less anxiety/stress and higher life satisfaction.”
READ MORE in The US Sun
The Japanese researchers included 20,969 people (8,558 men and 12,411 women) aged 40 or older in the study.
Participants underwent an annual health check and were asked whether they had sexual interest in the opposite sex.
Over a seven-year period, researchers examined possible links between sexual interest and death.
Of the male participants, almost one in twelve reported a lack of sexual interest, compared to one in six women.
“Interestingly,” the researchers write, “these men had significantly higher overall mortality rates than their counterparts who continued to have sexual interest.”
These men “also had higher cancer mortality, and these associations remained significant even after controlling for various factors such as age, smoking, alcohol consumption and psychological distress.”
The study didn’t look at how often people actually had sex or what reasons they had for not having sexual interest.
And compared to participants who expressed sexual interest, those without sexual interest were more likely to smoke, drink, laugh less and have diabetes.
According to Dr. However, according to Vrangalova, an important difference is that it is very “likely that people who are happier and healthier to begin with tend to have more sex.”
“We know, for example, that depression and anxiety/stress reduce sex drive in most people” and obesity “makes it harder to get an erection,” she says.
“Many other physical and mental health problems reduce sex drive, reduce the ability to become aroused and/or achieve orgasm, and also reduce the likelihood of finding sexual partners,” she added.
However, the researcher’s conclusion was clear: lack of sexual interest should be considered the main risk factor for all-cause mortality.
And it’s not the first time the link has been made.
In a 2020 article published in the European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, Dr. Luke Curtis, medical researcher and associate professor of public health at East Carolina University, boldly argues that sex saves lives.
Curtis told The US Sun that “several large studies have reported that regular sex is associated with significantly longer lifespans, significantly lower risks of a second heart attack, significantly lower rates of cancer (particularly prostate and breast cancer), and significantly lower levels of depression. “Risk.”
A study he cited of nearly 1,000 men in south Wales found that over a ten-year period, the risk of death was 50 percent lower for men who ejaculated an average of two or more times a week compared to those who ejaculated less than once a month.
The researchers concluded: “Sexual activity appears to have a protective effect on men’s health.”
A 2016 study by Lorelei Mucci, professor of epidemiology at the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, found that ejaculating at least 20 times a month reduced the risk of prostate cancer by about 20 percent compared to men who ejaculated just four times Month ejaculated seven times in the same period.
In both studies, ejaculation could mean either during sex or after masturbation.
And it’s important to note that while ejaculation and lower prostate cancer rates have been linked several times, the results are inconclusive.
But there’s no harm in doctors prescribing “more sex,” right?
According to a 2020 study published in the Journal of Gerontology, sex with partners has been shown to improve brain health at all ages, particularly when it comes to memory and verbal communication.
Frequent sex has been shown to stimulate neuronal growth in the hippocampus, the part of the brain responsible for processing emotions and forming memories, according to a study published in the Journal of Chemical Neuroanatomy.
DECREASE SEX
A lack of sex is also linked to increased feelings of loneliness, which is linked to illnesses such as dementia later in life.
But there’s a small problem: Some studies suggest that people are having less sex.
Researchers at Indiana University found that nearly one in three men between the ages of 18 and 24 regularly go without sex for a year or longer.
The 2020 study found that not only are sexual encounters declining, but the desire to engage in forms of self-pleasure also appears to be on a downward spiral.
The authors note that solo and partnered sexual behavior is “relevant to health, well-being and relationships.”
The decline in both factors, they suggest, is having a profoundly negative impact on notions of “human connection and intimacy.”
Although Dr. While Vrangalova emphasizes that she is “not concerned with predicting the future,” she is concerned that we as a society are “going in the wrong direction.”
As “more and more people of all ages feel isolated and lonely and spend time online instead of with each other,” we’re seeing pornography “act as a substitute for real-life connection,” she said.
“Data shows that younger generations are having less sex than older ones (despite greater sexual openness and more accepting attitudes towards sexuality), and the increasing attention-grabbing of all sorts of virtual technologies will only make this worse,” she added.