When women go through menopause, the hormonal changes they skill often guide to a drop in libido and less attention in sex. It's natural world captivating its course - just another stage in the female life series. It's the way we're built and automatic, biologically speaking.
So what do we do about Viagra and the other erectile dysfunction drugs that are now ordinary and marketed straight to men in TV commercials and magazine ads?
It's a significant question to consider, for the reason that as all women knows, it takes two to ballet. Viagra's crash on men's sex lives also impact women's sex lives.
Viagra is marketed to aging men whose female counterpart are going from side to side their own sexual disaster - menopause. These women desire less sex but their associates now would like more.
It seems that Viagra raised quite a few questions for wedded women about wedded compulsion, for instance. Then again, there were other letters that reflected thrill about husbands emotion strong and sure after a epoch of impotence, so the reply to Viagra in the inhabitants is quite multifaceted.It should be telling that at this point, almost 10 years after Viagra's first appearance, only 50% of men who received prescriptions for Viagra end up refilling their prescriptions.
Viagra was the forerunner of things to come in the form of the pharmacology of aging and sexuality.
Viagra as a cultural product and thus a window onto our culture. It helps us see where we are when it comes to sexuality, gender medicine.
Viagra is surely sociologically important as it has tinted a lot of social problems in the way we do health and gender and sexuality in our civilization.
1 comment:
i like yours writting way nice introduction
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