Survey suggests financial stress a big part of dissatisfaction
NEW YORK - Americans 45 and older are far more open to sex outside of marriage than they were 10 years ago, but they're engaging in sex less often and with less satisfaction, according to a major new survey.
What's the problem?
Financial
stress is a prime culprit, said sociologist Pepper Schwartz, the sex
and relationship expert for the American Association of Retired People,
which conducted the study.
"The
economy has had an impact on these people," she said. "They're more
liberal in their attitudes, yet they're having sex less often. The only
thing I see that's changed in a negative direction is financial
worries."
The
survey, being released Friday, is based on detailed questionnaires
completed last year by 1,670 people 45 and over. The AARP, which
represents 40 million Americans over 50, conducted similar surveys on
sexual attitudes and practices in 1999 and 2004.
One
of the most pronounced changes over the 10-year span dealt with sex
outside of marriage. In the 1999 survey, 41 percent of the respondents
said nonmarital sex was wrong. That figure dropped to 22 percent in the
new survey.
Yet
sexual activity — marital or not — seems to be less frequent overall
for this age group. In the new survey, 28 percent said they had
intercourse at least once a week, and 40 percent at least once a month
— both categories were down roughly 10 percentage points from 2004.
Asked if they were satisfied with their sex lives, 43 percent in the new survey said yes, down from 51 percent in 2004.
One
intriguing finding: Respondents who had a partner but weren't married
had sex more frequently and with more satisfaction than respondents who
were married.
"These
long-term married couples may get a little less interested," Schwartz
said. "Older people in nonmarried relations work harder at it and enjoy
it more."
Schwartz,
a professor at the University of Washington and author of 16 books on
relationships, said it was notable how even respondents in their 70s
and 80s stressed that sex was important to their quality of life.
"The big difference as people age is not that sex becomes less important but that a partner becomes less accessible," she said.
Gender
differences were pronounced in several responses. Men think about sex
and engage it more often than women, and are about twice as likely as
women (21 percent versus 11 percent) to admit to sexual activity
outside their primary relationship.
With
many older men likely to have multiple partners, Schwartz expressed
concern that only 12 percent of the survey's sexually active single
males reported using condoms. She cautioned that even the elderly
should not ignore the risk of sexually transmitted disease.
According
to the survey, men are more than five times as likely as women to say
they think of sex at least once a day, and nearly three times as likely
to say they engage in self-stimulation at least once a week.
Dr.
Stacy Tessler Lindau, a professor of medicine at the University of
Chicago who has studied seniors' relationships, said her research — not
connected to the AARP — suggests that men are increasingly more
satisfied with their sex lives, compared to women.
One
possible reason, she said, was the surge in use of erectile-dysfunction
drugs by men. Comparable drugs to enhance older women's sex lives have
not yet emerged on a broad scale.
According
to the AARP survey, 10 percent of the male respondents took medication
to improve sexual functioning, and 23 percent reported being diagnosed
for erectile dysfunction or impotence.
The
survey asked respondents what would improve their sexual satisfaction.
Twenty percent of the women and 37 percent of the men said better
health; 14 percent of the women and 26 percent of the men said better
personal finances.
One heartening development, Schwartz said, was that more older singles are venturing onto online dating services.
Epitomizing
that trend are Tony Cost, 74, and his wife, Rosemary, 68, of Cherry
Hill, N.J., who met in 2007 through the online dating service eHarmony
and married in May 2008.
Tony Cost said he had been a widower for about three years before trying eHarmony.
"It
was just a point in my life where I decided I wanted to do more than
just sit. I wanted to look for someone to share the rest of my life
with," he said.
The
couple said they exchanged 55 e-mails before their first face-to-face
meeting, a dinner at a restaurant that went on for five hours as they
chatted.
Speaking
of his generation as a whole, Tony Cost said there's more interest
among divorced and widowed singles in finding new partners.
"We're living longer, we want to enjoy life," he said. "There are a number of incentives to take that first step and reach out."
The
AARP survey was administered in both English and Spanish, and included
630 Hispanic respondents — a bigger share than in the general
population in order to provide data for a separate upcoming report.
The
Hispanic respondents reported a higher-than-average level of health
concerns, but the survey found, "Hispanics are more sexually active and
satisfied than the general population."