YOUNG women today are nearly three times more sexually active than those of their grandmothers’ generation in the liberal heyday of the Swinging 60s, according to a survey.
The study found that women in the so-called Noughties between 2000 and 2009 had an average of 5.65 different sexual partners by the time they were 24. Almost one in 10 of those asked claimed to have slept with more than 10 different partners.
By contrast, women who were in their early 20s in the 1960s had an average of 1.67 partners, and women of their mothers’ generation, aged 24 in the 1970s, had 3.72 sexual partners by the same age.
The survey by ICM on behalf of Lloyds Pharmacy, questioned more than 3,000 women across Britain.
It also found that although women’s sex life has increased, sexual health is not improving.
Cancer Research UK statistics show that incidence rates of cervical cancer in women under the age of 25 have not fallen, despite better screening.
Its figures reveal that although the number of cervical cancer cases in older women has fallen significantly in the last 10 years, diagnoses of the infection in women under the age of 25 have not followed the same trend.
The increase in sexual partners could be one reason, says Lloyds Pharmacy.
a d v e r t i s e m e n t
This appeared in the printed version of the Irish Examiner Wednesday, March 17, 2010