HEALTH: For many women, pubic
hair removal, whether through trimming, waxing, or shaving, is a regular part
of life: Study found that some 62 percent of U.S. women remove all their pubic
hair, while 84 percent do "some" grooming, and that the overwhelming
majority of groomers thought less hair was more hygienic.
Now, a new experiment with about
7,580 U.S. adults published in the journal Sexually Transmitted Infections
suggests a potential dark side of down-there grooming. When researchers from
the University of California, San Francisco, set out to investigate possible
connections between grooming practices, sexual activity, and STI history, they
found that both women and men who removed their pubic hair were at higher risk
for STIs than those who didn't, with 14 percent of groomers reporting a
lifetime history of STIs to non-groomers' 8 percent. "Extreme
groomers," or people who removed all of their pubic hair more than 11
times per year, were more likely to report having had an STI than groomers who
weren't extreme (18 percent versus 14 percent).
The researchers hypothesize
that this is because small skin tears from shaving or trimming could lead to
infection, and they also discovered that regular groomers tend to be more
sexually active than their more relaxed counterparts in the first place.
Among study participants, 84
percent of women and 66 percent of men reported ever having waxed, shaved, or
trimmed their pubic hair, while 17 percent of all self-reported groomers said
they removed all of their pubic hair at least once a month, and 22 percent said
they groomed daily or weekly. Sounds exhausting, but you do you, while making
sure that any cuts or tears you might have are well-protected during sex. The
researchers did add one caveat: Pubic hair removal, it seems, protects against
lice, remarking that "individuals at risk for pubic lice could be
counseled to remove their pubic hair,
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