Research Topics
| Richard D HayesSummaryAffiliation: University of Melbourne Country: Australia Publications
| Collaborators
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Detail Information
Publications
Confronting the challenges: epidemiological study of female sexual dysfunction and the menopauseLorraine Dennerstein
Office for Gender and Health, Department of Psychiatry, The University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
J Sex Med 2:118-32. 2005....
Prevalence of sexual difficulties among female sex workers and clients attending a sexual health serviceThiloma Munasinghe
Melbourne Sexual Health Centre, The Alfred Hospital, Victoria, Australia
Int J STD AIDS 18:613-6. 2007..04). The prevalence of sexual difficulties, other than desire was similar to those of non-sex workers. These findings may be relevant only to sex workers operating in a highly regulated sex industry...
What is the "true" prevalence of female sexual dysfunctions and does the way we assess these conditions have an impact?Richard D Hayes
University of Melbourne Department of Public Health, Melbourne
J Sex Med 5:777-87. 2008..A wide range of prevalence estimates of female sexual dysfunctions (FSD) have been reported...
Risk factors for female sexual dysfunction in the general population: exploring factors associated with low sexual function and sexual distressRichard D Hayes
School of Population Health, The University of Melbourne, Australia
J Sex Med 5:1681-93. 2008..No previous population-based studies have used validated instruments to measure female sexual dysfunction (FSD) in Australian women across a broad age range...
The impact of aging on sexual function and sexual dysfunction in women: a review of population-based studiesRichard Hayes
Department of Psychiatry, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
J Sex Med 2:317-30. 2005..However, a range of methodological issues limit the conclusions that can be drawn from many published studies in this area...
What can prevalence studies tell us about female sexual difficulty and dysfunction?Richard D Hayes
Department of Psychiatry, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia
J Sex Med 3:589-95. 2006..Many recent studies have investigated the prevalence of female sexual difficulty/dysfunction...
Relationship between hypoactive sexual desire disorder and agingRichard D Hayes
Office for Gender and Health, Department of Psychiatry, The University of Melbourne, Australia
Fertil Steril 87:107-12. 2007..The American Foundation of Urologic Disease and the American Psychiatric Association stipulate that HSDD is only diagnosed when both low sexual desire and sexually related personal distress are present...
Are aspects of study design associated with the reported prevalence of female sexual difficulties?Richard D Hayes
School of Population Health, Department of Public Health, University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Fertil Steril 90:497-505. 2008..To investigate associations between the prevalence of sexual difficulties reported in published studies and design features of those studies to determine if differences in design contribute to variation in prevalence estimates...
Sexual function, dysfunction, and sexual distress in a prospective, population-based sample of mid-aged, Australian-born womenLorraine Dennerstein
Office for Gender and Health, Department of Psychiatry, The University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
J Sex Med 5:2291-9. 2008..Previous, population-based studies investigating the risk factors for sexual distress have not drawn on longitudinal data...
The frequency of sexual intercourse reported by women: a review of community-based studies and factors limiting their conclusionsAnja Schneidewind-Skibbe
Office for Gender and Health, Department of Psychiatry, The University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
J Sex Med 5:301-35. 2008..A range of methodological inconsistencies has the potential to affect reported prevalence rates of sexual intercourse...
Modeling response rates in surveys of female sexual difficulty and dysfunctionRichard D Hayes
University of Melbourne Public Health, Melbourne, Australia
J Sex Med 4:286-95. 2007..Studies that address sensitive topics, such as female sexual difficulty and dysfunction, often achieve poor response rates that can bias results. Factors that affect response rates to studies in this area are not well characterized...
