AFP
November 26, 2013
The number of British women having lesbian encounters has quadrupled in the last 20 years, according to the largest-ever survey of Britain’s sexual habits which was published on Tuesday.
The National Survey of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles, which quizzed more than 15,000 Britons about their sex lives, found that nearly 8% of women had been with female partners, compared to just 1.8% in 1990.
In contrast, the number of men having gay sex has remained more stable over the same period, and now stands at 4.8% according to the findings published in the Lancet medical journal.
Professor Kaye Wellings of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, which co-ran the study, said there had been a “remarkable” change in women’s sexual behaviour since the first survey two decades ago.
“In some areas of sexual behaviour we have seen a narrowing of the gender gap, but in others we have seen women overtaking men in the diversity of their behaviour,” she said.
The trends need to be seen “against the backdrop of the profound changes in the position of women in society, the norms governing their lifestyles, and media representations of female sexuality”, she added.
British women have twice as many sexual partners over a lifetime as they did 20 years ago — the figure now is 7.7 on average.
Men also have more partners than before — around 12 over a lifetime, up from 8.6 — but the smaller increase suggests “a narrowing of the gender gap”, according to the study.
Elsewhere the survey found that Britons are having sex less often but are enjoying it well into their seventies.
The average Briton has intercourse less than five times a month, compared to more than six times a month a decade ago.
The study said the drop was explained partly by the fact that more Britons live alone than before, meaning they have “less opportunity to have sex” and by the economy.
“In a recession we find an association between unemployment and a low number of sexual partners, perhaps due to low self-esteem,” explained Wellings.