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Journal Article

Citation

Gallup GG, Burch RL, Platek SM. Arch. Sex. Behav. 2002; 31(3): 289-293.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2002, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1023/a:1015257004839

PMID

12049024

Abstract

In a sample of sexually active college females, condom use, as an indirect measure of the presence of semen in the reproductive tract, was related to scores on the Beck Depression Inventory. Not only were females who were having sex without condoms less depressed, but depressive symptoms and suicide attempts among females who used condoms were proportional to the consistency of condom use. For females who did not use condoms, depression scores went up as the amount of time since their last sexual encounter increased. These data are consistent with the possibility that semen may antagonize depressive symptoms and evidence which shows that the vagina absorbs a number of components of semen that can be detected in the bloodstream within a few hours of administration.


Language: en

Keywords

Condoms; Depression; Female; Humans; Male; Prevalence; Semen; Severity of Illness Index; Suicide, Attempted; Surveys and Questionnaires

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