Mating in Captivity: The Influence of Social Location on Sexual Satisfaction through Phases of the COVID-19 Pandemic.

IF 3 Q1 SOCIOLOGY Socius Pub Date : 2023-06-06 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1177/23780231231173899
Elizabeth E McElroy, Samuel L Perry, Joshua B Grubbs
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Abstract

The recent global pandemic provides a natural experiment "intervention" to examine how differing baseline social dynamics such as gender, education, and politics shaped diverging patterns of well-being during rapidly shifting societal conditions. Using married adults from a nationally representative panel study in the United States from August 2019 to August 2021, discontinuous growth curves reveal a large drop in average married sexual satisfaction in both quality and frequency directly following the pandemic onset. Moreover, sexual satisfaction remained largely suppressed for the subsequent 18 months, apart from a brief "optimism blip" in the fall of 2020. Race, age, income, employment, parenthood, education, and political affiliation all appear as meaningful predictors, but these differ across various phases of the pandemic and by gender. These results reveal evidence of lingering changes in subjective sexual well-being as well as patterns of catastrophe risk and resilience moderated by social location factors.

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圈养交配:在 COVID-19 大流行的各个阶段,社会位置对性满意度的影响。
最近的全球大流行为我们提供了一个自然实验 "干预 "的机会,以研究在快速变化的社会条件下,不同的基线社会动态(如性别、教育和政治)是如何形成不同的幸福模式的。通过对 2019 年 8 月至 2021 年 8 月期间美国具有全国代表性的已婚成年人进行面板研究,不连续的增长曲线显示,在大流行病爆发后,已婚成年人的平均性满意度在质量和频率上都直接出现了大幅下降。此外,在随后的 18 个月中,除了 2020 年秋季短暂的 "乐观昙花一现 "之外,性满意度在很大程度上仍然受到抑制。种族、年龄、收入、就业、父母身份、教育程度和政治派别都是有意义的预测因素,但这些因素在大流行的不同阶段和不同性别之间存在差异。这些结果揭示了主观性幸福感的持续变化,以及受社会位置因素调节的灾难风险和复原力模式。
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来源期刊
Socius
Socius Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
6.70%
发文量
84
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊最新文献
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