Posts Tagged ‘STDs’

Is Hook-Up Fatigue Setting In?

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

It looks that way.  Stephanie Chen’s CNN article, No Hooking Up, No Sex for Some Co-eds, reports students are choosing to disengage from the often alcohol-fueled hook-up scene that leaves many women with a hangover of the blues even if they manage to avoid getting a sexually transmitted disease. 

It shouldn’t come as a surprise.  While some researchers have found no long-term harmful psychological damage from hooking-up, other studies, writes Chen, “have shown the instability from hooking up can cause depression.  Repeated rejection and detached relationships can also damage self-esteem.”  Even researchers who discount psychological damage warn that the hook-up culture has become a “direct route for spreading STDs,” since those who practice this type of sex tend to engage with many more partners.  

A growing body of evidence suggests women and men have very different morning-after reactions to friends-with-benefits, hooking up, and similar nonromantic sexual relations.

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No health care for STDs, drunkenness and other ‘failures of personal responsibility’

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

Though he doesn’t heed his own advice, New York’s Mayor Michael Bloomberg has no hesitation forcing others to live by it.

Emboldened by successful drives to reduce smoking, obesity and the use of trans fats in New York city, mayor Michael Bloomberg today opened a new front in healthy living for New Yorkers by launching a campaign to reduce consumption of salt.

If a politician can grab this kind of power from a non-health care political office, imagine the kind of power he’d wield if he were appointed to a seat on some future nationalized Health Care Panel charged with making policy decisions about who gets what kind of medical care.

‘Personal responsibility’ and ‘disease prevention’ loom large in the current national health care reform debate.   But what if ‘personal responsibility’ became a condition for obtaining medical care?  A history of good behavior gave someone a pass to the head of the medical treatment line, while bad behavior relegated one to the end of the line or out of the queue altogether?

Who would define ‘good’ and ‘bad’?  Politicians, of course.  And that should terrify everyone regardless of his or her political persuasion.

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