About one in ten perimenopausal or menopausal women masturbate to relieve their symptoms, according to a study that has generated media interest around the world.
The attention is likely because masturbation is a novel (and possibly somewhat salacious) strategy to ease these symptoms, and older women are often seen as asexual.
So does masturbating really relieve symptoms, as the study published in the journal Menopause suggests? Let's see if the evidence stacks up.
Watch: Doctor explains why 'menopause hormonal therapy' is better than 'hormone replacement therapy'. Post continues below.
The health benefits of masturbation.
The study was conducted in the United States and was led by researchers at the Kinsey Institute at Indiana University, one of the world's best known research institutes that specialises in sex and relationships. The study was funded by sex toy company Womanizer.
Researchers surveyed a representative sampleof 1,178 perimenopausal and menopausal women aged 40–65.
Women who reported changes in their periods but still had at least one period in the previous year were categorised as perimenopausal. Women who said they had not had a period in a year or longer were categorised as menopausal.























