New Study Shows Marijuana Improves Sex And Could Close “Orgasm Inequality Gap” Between Men And Women!
An additional study has discovered proof that cannabis can improve sex, with individuals describing increased desire, more intense orgasms, and improved sensory perception. The article, which was conducted by Amanda Moser of East Carolina University and is now a sexologist in Denver who specializes in combining cannabis and sex, was published on Friday in the Journal of Cannabis Research.
More than 70% of respondents who reported using cannabis before sex felt it improved orgasms and increased desire, according to the results of a Moser online poll of 811 individuals who had used cannabis. The results were positive independent of age or gender. Another 62.5 percent of users claimed that cannabis increased their enjoyment during masturbation.
The study’s findings, according to Moser and her co-authors, are particularly pertinent to women’s pleasure. The authors write that the findings “indicate that cannabis can potentially narrow the orgasm disparity gap,” alluding to earlier research that showed that women who have sex with men are typically less likely to orgasm than their partners.
According to the study, women may be more likely to orgasm when consuming cannabis before sexual encounters, which may help ensure that both men and women feel equal amounts of sexual pleasure and satisfaction. More than 90% of men claim to typically experience orgasms during sexual activity, but less than 50% of women do, according to previous studies.
Immediately following the completion of her poll, Moser said to Marijuana Moment in 2019, “To me, that’s a concern.” Moser exchanged links with medical marijuana and legal cannabis advocacy groups on social media and posted the survey there to entice respondents. If a respondent was under 18 or had never smoked cannabis, they were eliminated from the study. The majority of respondents said they were white (78.1%), female (64.9%), and college-educated (80.1 percent).
Twenty-three percent (23.1%) of respondents identified as LGBTQIA+. The respondents, who ranged in age from 18 to 85, stated that they were monogamous in 73.7 percent of cases. The poll asked questions about participants’ perceptions of their senses of smell, taste, and touch after using cannabis. It also included a dozen or so questions about how marijuana affected other sex and arousal-related topics.
The study claims that “this all-encompassing scale transcends beyond the physiological consequences (such as achieving an erection) and adds total sexual functioning and satisfaction.” Sixty-two. 8 percent of respondents said they smoked marijuana every day. Six in ten people (58.9%) reported consciously using cannabis before having intercourse. According to the authors, several findings were in line with prior research.
For instance, increased desire and orgasmic intensity were reported by both men and women. Women claimed to be better able to experience several orgasms. The report claims that these findings “match with the improved relaxation after consuming cannabis.” Cannabis users report feeling more relaxed generally, both mentally and physically, which would enhance sexual function and pleasure.
More than 70% of respondents claimed that cannabis improved their touch and taste senses. That much is probably obvious to anyone who has ever had the munchies, but the authors of the study also point out that taste and touch are “two senses that are heavily employed during sexual intercourse.” Men’s ability to sustain and attain an erection with cannabis is one area where the survey results diverge from other studies.
The guys surveyed in Moser’s study reported no such difficulties, contrary to some data that suggested cannabis could impair that capacity. But because this study was self-report, the authors speculate that “social desirability may have stopped them from reporting erectile difficulties.” The study’s dependence on self-reported memories of cannabis users is, in fact, one of its main limitations.
According to the paper, “participants were asked to retroactively self-report based on several years, which would result in recall bias.” In contrast to the gathering of physiological data, it is stated that “results are gauging participants’ impressions of the effects of cannabis.” Moser notes that people who intentionally smoked cannabis before sex experienced much higher levels of sexual satisfaction.
As opposed to a genuine physiological effect, Moser admits that these results could be the product of the mentality that taking cannabis will boost pleasure because of its aphrodisiac properties. The sedative properties of cannabis, on the other hand, “may result in increased desire or lowered inhibitions that may contribute to increased sexual functioning and satisfaction.”
According to Moser, the study’s findings could have an impact on how medical dysfunctions are treated, particularly in women. “The muscular relaxation and improved sexual function that occur from cannabis usage may be beneficial for women with vaginismus (i.e., painful intercourse), while women with diminished desire may also show potential benefits.”
The lead author of a 2019 study with related results was Becky Lynn, a women’s health expert and professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Saint Louis University in Maryland. Women who admitted to using marijuana prior to sex were more than twice as likely to report having satisfying orgasms in that OB/GYN office study of female patients.
During that time, Lynn said to Weedmaps, “I have seen [cannabis] utilized in women with chronic pain conditions that result in painful sex, women who experience difficulty with orgasm or an inability to orgasm, and women who take it to boost their libido, which may not match their partner’s libido.
Women who used cannabis more frequently also reported better sex, according to a 2020 study published in the journal Sexual Medicine. Also stated are positive connections between marijuana and sex in numerous internet studies. One investigation even discovered a link between rising sex activity and the legalization of marijuana.
However, a different study warns that using more marijuana does not always equate to having greater sex. According to a 2019 literature review, the effect of cannabis on libido may vary depending on dosage, with higher degrees of arousal and satisfaction being correlated with lower THC levels.
According to most research, marijuana improves women’s sexual function, although too much THC can have the opposite effect. The authors of the review stated that it appears that changes in desire may be dose-dependent. “Several research has studied the effects of marijuana on libido. Studies confirm that smaller doses increase desire, but greater amounts either reduce desire or have no effect at all.