Female Sexual Response

(Updated March 2022) Sexual expression is a normal and healthy part of human behavior. However, many health care providers are not effective at speaking with their patients about sexuality and sexual health, particularly midlife women. …

Female Sexual Response

(Updated March 2022)

Sexual expression is a normal and healthy part of human behavior. However, many health care providers are not effective at speaking with their patients about sexuality and sexual health, particularly midlife women. The success of treating erectile dysfunction (ED) in men has driven a dramatic interest in understanding female sexual problems, and a variety of treatments are now available and in development. However, in trying to understand and treat women who may be experiencing sexual distress, questions have naturally arisen about the differences between male and female sexual response. A brief history of the evolving understanding of female sexual response helps answer these questions.

Linear Model

In 1966, Masters and Johnson published their groundbreaking book, Human Sexual Response.1 They proposed a linear model of sexual response for both men and women composed of four stages, beginning with excitement/arousal and proceeding to plateau, orgasm, and resolution (see Figure 1). In 1979, Kaplan added the concept of desire to the model and condensed the response into three phases: desire, arousal, and orgasm.2,3 Over the past decade, this framework has been called into question for women for a number of reasons:

  1. It assumes that men and women have similar sexual responses, and in so doing may pathologize normal behavior in women.4,5
  2. Many women do not move progressively and sequentially through the phases as described. According to sex educator and researcher Beverly Whipple, PhD, RN, FAAN, professor emerita at Rutgers University, women may not even experience all of the phases—for example, they may move from sexual arousal to orgasm and satisfaction without experiencing sexual desire, or they can experience desire, arousal, and satisfaction but not orgasm.5 This thinking was alluded to by Masters and Johnson and is echoed by Rosemary Basson, MB, FRCP, of the University of British Columbia, who posits that much of female sexual desire is actually responsive rather than spontaneous—for instance, a reaction to a partner’s sexual interest rather than a spontaneous stirring of her own libido.6
  3. As a largely biologic model, the Masters and Johnson and Kaplan framework has been criticized because it does not take into account non-biologic experiences such as pleasure and satisfaction7 or place sexuality in the context of the relationship.4

Circular Model

In 1997, armed with the recognition that not all women conform to the linear model of sexual response, Whipple and Brash-McGreer proposed a circular sexual response pattern for women.7 This concept is built on the Reed model, which comprises four stages (see Figure 2): seduction (encompassing desire), sensations (excitement and plateau), surrender (orgasm), and reflection (resolution). By making Reed’s model circular, Whipple and Brash-McGreer demonstrate that pleasant and satisfying sexual experiences may have a reinforcing effect on a woman, leading to the seduction phase of the next sexual experience. If, during reflection, the sexual experience did not provide pleasure and satisfaction, the woman may not have a desire to repeat the experience.

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Non-linear Model

Basson has also constructed a new model of female sexual response that incorporates the importance of emotional intimacy, sexual stimuli, and relationship satisfaction (see Figure 3).6 This model acknowledges that female sexual functioning proceeds in a more complex and circuitous manner than male sexual functioning and that female functioning is dramatically and significantly affected by numerous psychosocial issues (e.g., satisfaction with the relationship, self-image, previous negative sexual experiences).

According to Basson, women have many reasons for engaging in sexual activity other than sexual hunger or drive, as the traditional model suggests. Although many women may experience spontaneous desire and interest while in the throes of a new sexual relationship or after a long separation from a partner, most women in long-term relationships do not frequently think of sex or experience spontaneous hunger for sexual activity. In these latter cases, Basson suggests that a desire for increased emotional closeness and intimacy or overtures from a partner may predispose a woman to participate in sexual activity. From this point of sexual neutrality—where a woman is receptive to being sexual but does not initiate sexual activity—the desire for intimacy prompts her to seek ways to become sexually aroused via conversation, music, reading or viewing erotic materials, or direct stimulation. Once she is aroused, sexual desire emerges and motivates her to continue the activity. On the road to satisfaction, there are many points of vulnerability that may derail or distract a woman from feeling sexually fulfilled. The Basson model clarifies that the goal of sexual activity for women is not necessarily orgasm but rather personal satisfaction, which can manifest as physical satisfaction (orgasm) and/or emotional satisfaction (a feeling of intimacy and connection with a partner).6,8

References

  1. Masters WH, Johnson VE. Human Sexual Response. Boston, MA: Little, Brown; 1966.
  2. Kaplan HS. Disorders of Sexual Desire and Other New Concepts and Techniques in Sex Therapy. New York, NY: Brunner/Hazel Publications; 1979.
  3. Berman JR, Bassuk J. Physiology and pathophysiology of female sexual function and dysfunction. World J Urol 2002;20:111-118.
  4. Working Group on A New View of Women’s Sexual Problems. A new view of women’s sexual problems. Electronic Journal of Human Sexuality 2000;3. www.ejhs.org/volume 3/newview.htm. Accessed 3/21/05.
  5. Whipple B. Women’s sexual pleasure and satisfaction. A new view of female sexual function. The Female Patient 2002;27:39-44.
  6. Basson R. Female sexual response: the role of drugs in the management of sexual dysfunction. Obstet Gynecol 2001;98:350-353.
  7. Whipple B, Brash-McGreer K. Management of female sexual dysfunction. In: Sipski ML, Alexander CJ, eds. Sexual Function in People with Disability and Chronic Illness. A Health Professional’s Guide. Gaithersburg, MD: Aspen Publishers, Inc.; 1997, pp 509-534.
  8. Walton B, Thorton T. Female sexual dysfunction. Curr Wom Health Rep 2003;3:319-326.

Visit Sex & A Healthier You for more information, publications, and resources on female sexuality and sexual health.

For more information about sexuality and sexual health issues visit www.arhp.org

Drug Integrity Associate Audrey Amos is a pharmacist with experience in health communication and has a passion for making health information accessible. She received her Doctor of Pharmacy degree from Butler University. As a Drug Integrity Associate, she audits drug content, addresses drug-related queries

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