Mental health articles

OF mental health care and mentally ill

Sexual Minorities: Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Questioning Youth

Sexual Minorities: Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Questioning Youth Th e previous decade has witnessed an unprecedented upsurge in the willingness of students to bring lesbian/gay/bisexual/transgender (LGBT) concerns to college counseling centers. Th is is partly attributable to the high visibility of alternative sexualities in the media (Will and Grace, Queer Eye for the Straight Guy) […]

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sexually transmitted infections symptoms

sexually transmitted infections symptoms Few experiences are as disquieting as contracting an STI. Even when curable, students may react with shock and feel dirty and betrayed. Romantic relationships are strained or dissolve when partners lose trust in each other or seek physical distance to avoid spreading infections. Not uncommonly, guilt and the related belief that the […]

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pregnancy and abortion counseling article

pregnancy and abortion counseling article Failure to utilize contraception, especially condoms, is multidetermined and should be explored whenever discussing sexuality. Many students eschew condoms for fear they preclude spontaneity or imply promiscuity, or because their partner insists or they feel less pleasure with a latex barrier.Still others succumb to myths (“I can’t get pregnant the fi […]

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Oral, Anal, and Penile–Vaginal Intercourse

Oral, Anal, and Penile–Vaginal Intercourse Among 18- to 21-year-olds, approximately 75% report having received or given oral sex (Mosher, Chandra, & Jones, 2005). Oft en treated casually, oral sex is increasingly embraced as a substitute for penile–vaginal intercourse that satisfi es (mostly) male sexual demands while maintaining virginity. Unfortunately, the potential for contracting an STI […]

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Hooking Up and Anonymous Sex

Hooking Up and Anonymous Sex Once considered a moral transgression, especially for women, single sexual encounters with a stranger or brief acquaintance are increasingly common among college students. Th ough defi nitions vary considerably, “hooking up”typically involves two people attending a party and sharing a mutual attraction, fl irting, and advancing to unplanned kissing, petting, […]

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Sexual Impetus, Abstinence, and Virginity

Sexual Impetus, Abstinence, and Virginity Sexual activity may be used to individuate from parents or distinguish oneself from community or religious norms. Some young people engage in sexual behavior because they erroneously believe that their peers are behaving similarly; others do so simply out of curiosity. Many use sex for emotional regulation and may increase […]

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sexual fantasizing in males and females

sexual fantasizing in males and females Sexual fantasizing, especially during masturbation, is widespread and is an important tool for gaining insight into sexual preferences, rehearsing anticipated sexual behavior, and developing a sexual identity. For some, though, fantasies reveal disturbing aspects of themselves. When students conceal fantasies they consider shameful, they fail to properly contextualize their […]

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masturbation practices of males and females

masturbation practices of males and females Prevalence of masturbation is diffi cult to ascertain because of the stigma associated with self-stimulation and its implication of immorality, hypersexuality, or inability to attract a sexual partner. Nonetheless, masturbation is the most frequent sexual activity among young males, with 85% of college men reporting having done it compared […]

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Who Is Doing What to Whom?

Despite a seemingly pervasive sexualized youth subculture (witness MTV), there actually has been a gradual decrease in adolescent heterosexual intercourse and pregnancies over the past decade that partly refl ects an increase in noncoital sexual activities. Th ese days both females (85%) and males (73%) are more likely to embrace relativistic beliefs that sexual behavior […]

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social concerns in health care and nursing

  social concerns in health care and nursing Whether clients present with sexual concerns or these concerns arise later in treatment, it is important for therapists to appreciate contemporary sexual lexicons. Students oft en bifurcate their experiences as “sex” and “not sex”—even though they may disagree about what constitutes “sex” (Reinisch & Sanders, 1999). Whereas […]

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