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The Role of Religion in Shaping Sexual Frequency and Satisfaction: Evidence from Married and Unmarried Older Adults

McFarland, Michael J.; Uecker, Jeremy E.; & Regnerus, Mark D. (2011). The Role of Religion in Shaping Sexual Frequency and Satisfaction: Evidence from Married and Unmarried Older Adults. Journal of Sex Research, 48(2-3), 297-308. PMCID: PMC3119480

Journal Article



McFarland, Michael J.
Uecker, Jeremy E.
Regnerus, Mark D.



2011


Journal of Sex Research

48

2-3

297-308







10.1080/00224491003739993

PMC3119480


4827


This study assesses the role of religion in influencing sexual frequency and satisfaction among older married adults and sexual activity among older unmarried adults. The study proposes and tests several hypotheses about the relationship between religion and sex among these two groups of older Americans, using nationally representative data from the National Social Life, Health, and Aging Project. Results suggest that among married older adults, religion is largely unrelated with sexual frequency and satisfaction, although religious integration in daily life shares a weak, but positive, association with pleasure from sex. For unmarried adults, such religious integration exhibits a negative association with having had sex in the last year among women, but not among men.


Sexual Behavior, Contraceptive Use, and Reproductive Health


Octet Stream icon 4827.ris — Octet Stream, 1 kB (1,259 bytes)

McFarland, Michael J.; Uecker, Jeremy E.; & Regnerus, Mark D. (2011). The Role of Religion in Shaping Sexual Frequency and Satisfaction: Evidence from Married and Unmarried Older Adults. Journal of Sex Research, 48(2-3), 297-308. PMCID: PMC3119480