The best defense against STIs is to practice safe sex, not to stop pubic grooming. Photograph: Yuri Arcurs/Getty Images/iStockphoto |
In all, 7,580 US adults were contacted as part of the survey. They were asked whether they groom their hair (66% of men and 84% of women said they did) and if so, how. Respondents were classified as “high-frequency groomers” if they trimmed their pubic hair daily or weekly. Those who had removed all of their pubic hair more than 11 times per year were labeled as “extreme groomers”.
The best defense against STIs is to practice safe sex, not to stop pubic grooming.
Grooming practices and STIs
Groomers were more likely to report a history of both cutaneous and secretory STIs when compared with non-groomers.
But there are other possible explanations. Some people might have chosen to remove their pubic hair after discovering that they have an STI. It’s also possible that people who groom their pubic hair have different sex lives from those who don’t – either having more frequent sex or engaging in more risky sexual behaviors. Weekly sexual activity was more common among those who groomed their pubic hair than those who didn’t.
Percentage who have sex weekly
Extreme or high-frequency groomers reported more weekly sexual activity than those who were nonextreme or low-frequency groomers.
SOURCE: theguardian
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