Insight
Sexual guilt and anxiety linked to worse sexual functioning

Women with stronger sexual guilt and anxiety report poorer sexual functioning, a study of sexually active women in Indonesia finds.
Sexual functioning is the ability to experience healthy, satisfying sexual activity, including desire, arousal, lubrication, orgasm and satisfaction, and the absence of pain during sex.
The study authors note that traditional values in Indonesian society discourage discussion of sexual issues, with sex remaining largely taboo.
They suggest young people face conflicting social and cultural views that foster sexual guilt and anxiety.
Sex guilt is a generalised expectation of punishment for violating standards of appropriate sexual behaviour.
Individuals with strong sex guilt may avoid sex, lack sexual initiative and struggle to process sexual stimuli. Sex anxiety concerns others’ opinions and possible breaches of social norms.
Participants were 169 women aged 19 to 40 from Greater Jakarta, recruited via an online survey shared on social media and WhatsApp.
Of those surveyed, 59 per cent were married, 44 per cent had children and 56 per cent held a bachelor’s or master’s degree.
They completed assessments of sexual functioning (Female Sexual Function Index), sex guilt (Brief Mosher Sex Guilt Inventory) and sex anxiety (Sex Anxiety Inventory).
Results showed higher sex guilt and sex anxiety were linked to worse sexual functioning.
There were no differences in sex guilt, sexual functioning or sex anxiety between participants with and without children. Single women tended to report worse sexual functioning than other groups.
Study authors Mia Audina Olivia and Ahmad Naufalul Umam concluded: “Our main finding confirmed the global dynamics on how sexual guilt and anxiety may hinder one’s sexual functioning, while the demographic data showed that sexual functioning in Indonesian women’s context is tied with normative relationship of marriage.”
The researchers noted that the study design does not allow causal conclusions to be drawn from the results.
Insight
Early PET scan could chemo response in aggressive breast cancer – study
Insight
Common cancer marker may play active role in preventing the disease, study finds

Ki-67, a protein used to measure tumour growth, may also help prevent chromosome errors that drive cancer, a study suggests.
The findings could change how scientists view Ki-67, a marker commonly used in breast cancer and other tumours to assess how quickly cancer cells are growing.
Researchers found the protein may help preserve genome stability by maintaining the structural integrity of centromeres, key parts of chromosomes that help ensure DNA is shared correctly during cell division.
The research was led by professor Paola Vagnarelli at Brunel University of London in collaboration with scientists at the University of Edinburgh and the Technical University of Berlin.
Professor Vagnarelli said: “Doctors already measure Ki-67 to see how aggressive a cancer might be. But our results suggest it is actually helping maintain genome stability.
“That means it may be more than a marker. It could potentially also be a therapeutic target.”
The study examined three proteins that attach to chromosomes during cell division and help rebuild the molecular system that tells each new cell what kind of cell it is.
Every human cell carries identical DNA. What makes a liver cell different from a brain cell is which genes are switched on and which are kept inactive.
When a cell divides, that entire system of switches must be rebuilt. The three proteins involved in this process were Ki-67, Repo-Man and PNUTS.
Vagnarelli’s team developed a method that individually removes each protein from a living cell at the precise point of division. Older techniques could not isolate that moment cleanly.
They found that cells rely on all three proteins to reset themselves after division, but each failed in a different way when removed.
Without PNUTS, gene activity spiralled out of control and thousands of genes switched on at once.
Without Repo-Man, cells escaped safety checkpoints that usually stop damaged or abnormal cells from continuing to divide.
“What we didn’t expect was how clean the separation was,” said Vagnarelli.
Each protein fails in its own specific way. There is no redundancy, no safety net. Which means there are three separate points at which this process can go wrong.
“When the system breaks down, cells can emerge with the wrong number of chromosomes. That condition, called aneuploidy, is seen in disorders such as Down syndrome and in many cancers.
“We also found that these chromosome errors can trigger inflammatory signals inside the cell.”
Aneuploidy means a cell has too many or too few chromosomes, which can disrupt normal growth and function.
Inflammatory signals are chemical messages that can make a cell behave as if it is responding to injury or infection.
“These cells behave almost as if they are under attack,” said Vagnarelli.
“The immune response switches on because the genome is unstable.
“That link between chromosome imbalance and inflammation could help explain patterns we see in several diseases.”
The researchers said the findings may help cancer scientists better understand how chromosome instability, loss of gene regulation and cells dividing before they are ready contribute to tumour growth.
They said understanding the normal machinery that prevents these errors may help researchers find ways to push cancer cells into making mistakes they cannot survive.
“We now have a clearer map of the machinery that resets the cell after division,” said Vagnarelli.
“That knowledge gives us a starting point for thinking about new therapeutic approaches.”
Insight
PCOS renamed after decade-long campaign to end ‘cyst’ misconception
News4 weeks agoWomen’s digital health market set to reach US$5.28 billion in 2026 – report
Fertility4 weeks agoWhy the UK’s fertility rate keeps falling – and what it means if you’re trying now
Wellness4 weeks agoWomen’s HealthX unveils Northwell Health, Corewell Health, Biogen & more to headline Chronic Disease stage
Opinion3 weeks agoWhat Maternal Mental Health Month reveals about where postpartum support actually breaks down
Fertility4 weeks agoToxins and climate harms having ‘alarming’ effect on fertility, research warns
Insight3 weeks agoNIH Grant terminations disproportionately impact minority scientists, research finds
Adolescent health2 weeks agoWUKA brings Period-Positive Pool Party to London Aquatics Centre to keep girls swimming through puberty
Fertility4 weeks agoResearcher explores weight loss jab impact on PCOS
















