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      Preventive care's forgotten women: life course, sexuality, and sexual health among homosexually and bisexually active women in France.

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          Abstract

          Although studies show that women who have sex with women (WSW) have poorer sexual health and more limited access to health care for gynecological problems than other women, the social processes giving rise to such health differences have not, so far, been explored. These processes may be formed in response to a dominant social norm, which assigns women to a heterosexual and monogamous sexuality. Based on data from a national random survey of sexuality (N = 6,824), enriched by qualitative interviews with WSW (n = 40), this analysis shows that bisexually active women had similar socio-demographic profiles to heterosexually active women, whereas homosexually active women appeared to be more highly educated than other women and less likely to live as couples than bisexually active women. Bisexually active women had more diversified sexual trajectories and sexual networks than other women. Chlamydia prevalence was found to be higher among bisexually active women, and homosexually active women reported fewer medical consultations for gynecological reasons. These analyses highlight the need to deconstruct the binary classification of homosexual versus heterosexual women. Because of constraint by the monogamous heterosexual norm, bisexually active women were less likely to be tested for sexually transmitted infections, and homosexually active women were less likely to have had gynecological follow-ups.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Sex Res
          Journal of sex research
          Informa UK Limited
          1559-8519
          0022-4499
          2013
          : 50
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Centre for Research in Epidemiology and Population Health, National Institute for Health and Medical Research, Paris, France.
          Article
          10.1080/00224499.2012.657264
          22497621
          fbd9017c-00b0-4ac2-ba6c-a3642359ddac
          History

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