Homosexual sex practices


ARTICLE

The health effects of same-sex sexual behavior are many. The public, government, and judiciary are being lead to assume that same-sex sexuality is a normal variant with interactions and results equivalent to heterosexual sexuality. However, this position runs reverse to professional literature and the track record of history.

By any repeatable measure, the percentage of the population identifying as gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgender (GLBT) is small. The United States Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that men having sex with men (MSM) comprise approximately two percent of the population, or four percent of the U.S male population.1 The University of Chicago’s National Opinion Research Center has conducted surveys regarding homosexuality since the late s and deems that approximately two percent of the U.S. population identifies as either gay, lesbian, or bisexual.2 The National Survey of Family Growth conducted by the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics initiate that among women ages 18 to 44, percent identified as bisexual with

How do same-sex couples have sex? How can they practice safer sex?

People who identify as lesbian, gay, bi or heterosexual can give and express pleasure in many ways. There isn’t just one way for two people to have sex, no matter what sex or sexual orientation they are.

What two people of the same sex do to have sex together depends on what feels good for them. Often, people think that sex is only putting a penis into a vagina, but that may not be the activity that brings the most pleasure to the two people. This is true for heterosexual, bisexual, lesbian and gay people.

Males who identify as gay, bisexual or just do sexual things with other males may use their fingers (manual stimulation), mouths (oral sex) and various body parts to give and receive pleasure. They may kiss, touch each other’s bodies or touch the penis and other areas including the scrotum or the anus. Sometimes they use penises to penetrate the anal opening (anal sex).

Females who identify as lesbian, bisexual or just do sexual things with other females may touch each other’s genitals by using their finger

Open Access

Peer-reviewed

  • Nicolas Méthy ,
  • Annie Velter,
  • Caroline Semaille,
  • Nathalie Bajos
  • Nicolas Méthy, 
  • Annie Velter, 
  • Caroline Semaille, 
  • Nathalie Bajos

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Abstract

Objective

In high-income countries, the social and epidemiological contexts surrounding homosexuality and AIDS possess changed profoundly in recent decades. This work sought to observe key indicators of the long-term sexual trajectories of successive generations of men who have sex with men (MSM) in France.

Methods

We performed a longitudinal analysis of the French Gay Press surveys, which were self-administered socio-behavioural questionnaires, repeated from to in the gay press, and on the internet in and An age-cohort analysis using graphical representations and multivariate logistic regressions was conducted among participants aged (N=38 ).

Results

First sexual intercourse occurred more often with a male partner in younger generations than in older ones: % in MSM who turned 18 in , % in , % in , poverall=). Every generation showed the same pattern of

LGBTQIA+ Safer Sex Guide

Zero.

Disgracefully, that’s the number of U.S. states that require sex education curriculums be comprehensively inclusive to LGBTQIA+ folks.

Most sex education programs, instead, assume that those receiving the information are both heterosexual and cisgender. If there’s anything less cute than clogs, it’s that degree of homophobia and transphobia.

That’s why we worked with GLSEN, Advocates for Youth, and two queer sex educators to create a safer sex guide that understands the accurate complexity and diversity across gender identities, sexual orientation, attractions, and experiences.

Only 5 (ish) percent of LGBTQIA+ students saw any LGBTQIA+ representation in health class.

This guide is for the 95 percent of students whose many sexual health questions went unanswered in school.

It’s also for any LGBTQIA+ person who’s ever wondered:

  • “What conversations should I have with a partner before sex?”
  • “Is there a peril of pregnancy or STI transmission during [insert sex act here]?”
  • “What can I do to make sex even better?”
  • “How do