OBJECTIVE: To evaluate which factors determine sexual activity and satisfaction with the sexual relationship 1 year after the first delivery. DESIGN: Prospective longitudinal cohort study. SETTING: Ten midwifery practices. POPULATION: Three hundred and seventy-seven nulliparous women were included. METHODS: The Maudsley Marital Questionnaire is a standardised and validated questionnaire with 15 items relating to marital and sexual adjustment, with a nine-point (0-8) scale appended to each question. Scores on the sexual scale (MMQ-S) range from 0 to 40. Higher scores are indicative of greater dissatisfaction. Sexual intercourse was dichotomised into having sexual intercourse or not having sexual intercourse. Several obstetric and maternal factors were analysed. MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS: Sexual intercourse at 1 year postpartum and dissatisfaction with the sexual relationship as assessed by the MMQ-S scale. RESULTS: In multiple logistic regression analysis, the main predictive factor for no sexual intercourse 1 year postpartum was no sexual intercourse at 12 weeks of gestation (beta 11.0 [4.01-30.4]). Women were five times less likely to be sexually active after a third/fourth degree anal sphincter tear as compared with women with an intact perineum (beta 0.2 [0.04-0.93]). Dissatisfaction with the sexual relationship 1 year after childbirth, assessed with the MMQ-S scale, is associated with not being sexually active at 12 weeks of gestation (beta- 0.208, P= 0.004) and with an older maternal age at delivery (beta 0.405, P= 0.032). CONCLUSION: An important prognostic factor for dissatisfaction with the sexual relationship 1 year postpartum was not being sexually active in early pregnancy. Satisfaction with the sexual relationship seems not to depend on pregnancy- and parturition-associated factors.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate which factors determine sexual activity and satisfaction with the sexual relationship 1 year after the first delivery. DESIGN: Prospective longitudinal cohort study. SETTING: Ten midwifery practices. POPULATION: Three hundred and seventy-seven nulliparous women were included. METHODS: The Maudsley Marital Questionnaire is a standardised and validated questionnaire with 15 items relating to marital and sexual adjustment, with a nine-point (0-8) scale appended to each question. Scores on the sexual scale (MMQ-S) range from 0 to 40. Higher scores are indicative of greater dissatisfaction. Sexual intercourse was dichotomised into having sexual intercourse or not having sexual intercourse. Several obstetric and maternal factors were analysed. MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS: Sexual intercourse at 1 year postpartum and dissatisfaction with the sexual relationship as assessed by the MMQ-S scale. RESULTS: In multiple logistic regression analysis, the main predictive factor for no sexual intercourse 1 year postpartum was no sexual intercourse at 12 weeks of gestation (beta 11.0 [4.01-30.4]). Women were five times less likely to be sexually active after a third/fourth degree anal sphincter tear as compared with women with an intact perineum (beta 0.2 [0.04-0.93]). Dissatisfaction with the sexual relationship 1 year after childbirth, assessed with the MMQ-S scale, is associated with not being sexually active at 12 weeks of gestation (beta- 0.208, P= 0.004) and with an older maternal age at delivery (beta 0.405, P= 0.032). CONCLUSION: An important prognostic factor for dissatisfaction with the sexual relationship 1 year postpartum was not being sexually active in early pregnancy. Satisfaction with the sexual relationship seems not to depend on pregnancy- and parturition-associated factors.
Authors: J Saxton; R Malyuta; I Semenenko; T Pilipenko; R Tereshenko; E Kulakovskaya; I Adejnova; L Kvasha; C Thorne Journal: Hum Reprod Date: 2010-07-19 Impact factor: 6.918