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Sex in Australia: autoerotic, esoteric and other sexual practices engaged in by a representative sample of adults
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 18:22 authored by Juliet Richters, Andrew E Grulich, Richard De VisserRichard De Visser, Anthony M A Smith, Chris E RisselObjectives: To describe the prevalence of a range of autoerotic and other non-coital sexual practices among Australians. Method: Computer-assisted telephone interviews were completed by a representative sample of 10,173 men and 9,134 women aged 16–59 years (response rate 73.1%). Respondents were asked whether in the past year they had: masturbated, engaged in various other autoerotic activities, or engaged in any of six other non-coital or esoteric practices. Results: Half of the respondents (65% men, 35% women) had masturbated in the past year. Nearly half (48%) of the men and 25% of the women had masturbated in the past four weeks, among whom men had done so a mean of 5.8 times and women 3.3 times. About a quarter of all respondents had watched an X-rated film (37% men, 16% women), 12% of men and 14% of women had used a sex toy, and 17% of men and 2% of women had visited an Internet sex site. 17% of men and 14% of women had engaged in digital-anal stimulation with a partner. Phone sex, role play or dressing up, bondage and discipline, sadomasochism or dominance and submission (BDSM-DS), fisting (rectal or vaginal, insertive or receptive) and rimming (oral-anal stimulation) were all engaged in by less than 5% of the sample. Conclusion: Most of the practices studied were engaged in by more men than women. A range of autoerotic activities are both substitutes for partnered sex and additional sources of pleasure for people with sexual partners.
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
Australian & New Zealand Journal of Public HealthISSN
1326-0200Publisher
Wiley-BlackwellIssue
2Volume
27Page range
180-190Department affiliated with
- Psychology Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes