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Sex
More Likely When
Women Are Most Fertile
Women
are likely to have more sex on the days when they are most fertile,
even if they are not trying to get pregnant, scientists said.
That means that taking a chance
and having sex without using contraception could be more likely
to result in unwanted pregnancies than previously thought.
"There apparently are biological
factors promoting intercourse during a woman's six fertile days,
whether she wants a baby or not," said Professor Allen Wilcox,
of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences in
Durham, North Carolina.
But he and his colleagues do not
understand the reasons and doubt that women are even aware of
them.
In a study of 68 women who recorded
when they had sex over a three-month period, Wilcox and his colleagues
discovered that during ovulation, when a woman is most likely
to become pregnant, the overall frequency of sex increased by
24 percent.
"There are some biological mechanisms
at work here that curiously we know very little about," he said
in an interview.
"It suggests that couples who 'take
a chance' with unprotected intercourse have the deck stacked against
them. Intercourse does not happen randomly," Wilcox, who reported
the findings in the journal Human Reproduction, added.
He and his colleagues are not sure
why sex is more frequent during a woman's most fertile time of
the month, but they suspect there are a few factors at work.
Most women have about six fertile
days a month -- the five days preceding ovulation and the day
of ovulation.
A woman's libido may be heightened
when she is ovulating so she has an increased interest in sex,
or she may produce more pheromones, chemicals that send messages
to other individuals, that increase her sexual attractiveness.
Animal studies have also shown
that having sex accelerates ovulation.
"For couples who want a baby these
biological mechanisms are a silent partner, helping to optimize
the timing of intercourse," Wilcox said.
But he said women who do not want
to conceive should be aware that unprotected sex may be riskier
than the odds suggest.
"For couples who don't want to
conceive the message would be that when you take a chance that
chance is even bigger than you might think."
Reference
Source 89
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