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Premarital Sex Doesn't
Doom the Union
(HealthScoutNews) -- When it's limited to the future husband,
premarital sex doesn't increase the risk of divorce for women.
That's what researchers from Western
Washington University found, whose study appears in the May issue
of the Journal of Marriage and Family.
Women who are committed to one
relationship, who have both premarital sex and cohabit only with
the man they eventually marry, don't have higher divorce rates
than women who abstain from premarital sex and cohabitation, the
study found.
For these women, premarital sex
and cohabiting are simply part of the process of developing a
long-term, committed relationship.
The finding offers a new perspective
on the long-held belief that cohabitation and premarital sex are
strong predictors of divorce for women.
In his study, sociologist Jay Teachman
queried women who took part in the 1995 National Survey of Family
Growth. He found that fewer than 18 percent of them reported refraining
from premarital sex and cohabitation before marriage.
Because the majority of the women
said they did have premarital sex and cohabitate before marriage,
that sequence has become an acceptable part of the path to marriage,
Teachman suggests.
The study findings don't support
the common belief that people who live together aren't committed
to marriage or that cohabiting reduces a person's commitment to
marriage, the author notes.
More information
Here's where you can learn more
about divorce.
Reference
Source 101
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