Changing social-sexual patterns in gynecologic practice
S. Wall and N. Kaltreider
One hundred randomly selected patients from the outpatient Gynecology Unit
of the University of California at San Francisco Medical Center were
interviewed to determine current attitudes toward reproductive and sexual
roles. Major areas of change apparent in the younger population were a
substantial decrease in formal marriage, a reduction in the wish for
children, a movement away from oral contraception back to mechanical
barrier methods, and an attitudinal shift toward acceptance of a bisexual
adaptation. It is important for the practicing physician to be responsive
to the life-style pattern present in the new generation of women patients.