PSYCHOLOGICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF WOMEN WITH SEXUAL INHIBITION (FRIGIDITY) IN SEX CLINICS
- 1 August 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease
- Vol. 163 (2) , 117-123
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005053-197608000-00006
Abstract
The psychological characteristics of 44 frigid women who applied for treatment of their sexual problem at 2 university hospital sex clinics and 26 women selected for treatment by the same criterion, but treated in private practice, were described. Presented for comparison are 53 female neurotics from a university hospital psychotherapy study, a sample of 65 consecutive female walk-ins of mixed psychiatric diagnosis from the psychiatric outpatient clinic, and a group of 35 female college student sophomores who comprised the normal sample. A battery of psychological tests including the MMPI [Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory], the Institute for Personality and Ability Testing-Self-Evaluation Form (IPAT), the Symptom Check List and the Eysenck Personality Inventory were given to each group. Female patients who applied to a sex dysfunction clinic, complaining primarily of sexual inhibition, appeared as a group identical to a normal control group in terms of their psychological profile and less neurotic than psychiatric outpatients, with the exception that the normals were less depressed. When women with primary orgasmic dysfunction from the above 3 samples were combined and compared to those with secondary orgasmic dysfunction (using Masters and Johnson''s criterion), the groups were identical, at least from a global psychological perspective. Little else can be gained by assessing global personality characteristics. Without discording the primary and secondary classifications, a potentially more fruitful approach would be to develop instruments that would measure specific dimensions, such as sexual misinformation, specific sexual anxiety or guilt, or resentment or hostility directed toward the immediate sexual partner. A scale to measure specific phobic-like sexual anxiety would have treatment implications because of the recently demonstrated effectiveness of specific anxiety-reducing techniques, such as systematic desensitization. Specific scales can also be useful in the assessment and prediction of outcome in psychotherapy.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: