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Sexuality and Disability

Sexuality and Disability

Paper instructions:
You will apply course content in three different creative, analytical papers.    You will use course concepts that we have explored to give meaning to or interpret the content of books, films, articles, news, media images, or any other collection or presentation of knowledge or ideas (i.e. diagnostic criteria; laws, rules, and mandates).  Each paper should be at least 3-4 pages (double spaced, 1 inch margins, 12 pt font, etc.), and must include reference to at least one related scholarly journal article (not assigned) as well as assigned reading.
283

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0146-1044/00/1200-0283$18.00/0 2000 Human Sciences Press, Inc.
Sexuality and Disability, Vol. 18, No. 4, 2000
Sexuality and Disability: The Missing
Discourse of Pleasure
Mitchell S. Tepper, Ph.D., M.P.H.
1,2
In the realm of sexuality and disability there is public discourse on deviance
and inappropriate behavior, abuse and victimization, asexuality, gender and
orientation with regard to women, and reproductive issues in women and men.
However, there seems to be a missing discourse of pleasure. The purpose of this
talk is to shed some cultural and historical insight into why this may be so, to
argue why sexual pleasure is important to quality of life, to point out a few of
the consequences of not including a discourse of pleasure, to share some of my
research on sexual pleasure in people with spinal cord injury (SCI), and to
make a plea for inclusion of sexual pleasure in the disability studies agenda.

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KEY WORDS: sexuality; disability; pleasure; disability studies.
I truly stand on the shoulders of giants. Before I get started I would like to
acknowledge a few people. First, Michelle Fine has influenced my thinking
with regard to the missing discourse of pleasure. Once upon a time, many years
ago, I read an article she wrote called “Sexuality, Schooling, and Adolescent
Females: The Missing Discourse of Desire” (1). In it she argued that the anti-sex rhetoric surrounding sex education and school-based health clinics does
little to enhance the development of sexual responsibility and subjectivity in
adolescents and in fact serves to increase experiences of victimization, teen
pregnancy, and school dropout. She also argued that inclusion of desire in the
sexual discourse serves to empower young females to be sexual agents, entitled
to pleasure and therefore responsible for their own sexuality. Fine details a
discourse of desire as follows:
1
President, The Sexual Health Network.
2
Address correspondence to Mitchell S. Tepper, Ph.D., M.P.H., 3 Mayflower Lane, Shelton, CT
06484; e-mail: mitch sexualhealth.com.
284 Tepper
A genuine discourse of desire would invite adolescents to explore what feels good and
bad, desirable and undesirable, grounded in experiences, needs, and limits. Such a dis-course would release females from a position of receptivity, enable an analysis of the
dialectics of victimization and pleasure, and would pose female adolescents as subjects
of sexuality, initiators as well as negotiators (p. 33)
I have simply extended her thinking to the context of sexuality and disability in
the words to follow.
Next, not second, there is Barbara Faye Waxman. Nearly 10 years ago, in
the pages of the disability rag, she led the battle cry with an article entitled,
“It ’s Time to Publicize Our Sexual Oppression” (2). She asked,  “Why hasn’t
our movement politicized our sexual oppression as we do transportation and
attendant services? ” And was so bold to state her belief that it is  “because we
are afraid that we are ultimately to blame for not getting laid; that it is some-how a personal inferiority. And in the majority culture this secret is a source of
personal embarrassment rather than a source of communal rage against the sex-ual culture itself ” (p. 85). Then there is the voice of Ann Finger who once noted
sexuality as a source of our deepest oppression and our deepest pain. And
lastly, and I know I leave out many like Susan Knight (3),

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who were also
pioneers in the field of sexuality and disability from our own disability perspec-tive, I ’d like to take take my hat off to Tom Shakespeare, Kath Gillespie-Sells
and Dominic Davies for their groundbreaking book, The Sexual Politics of Dis-ability: Untold Desires (4).
So what I’m here to say is not entirely new or original. Yet I hope my
perspective can add additional insights and serve to keep the momentum going.
My foundation is not in disability studies per se but in business, in public
health, and in human sexuality. I have been a member of the disability commu-nity for almost 18 years and have been formally doing research on sexuality
and disability for the past 10 years. I have developed a curriculum to teach
health professionals how to provide comprehensive sexual health in rehabilita-tion programs (5) and taught that program to hundreds of medical students and
experienced rehab professionals. I also conduct sexuality education workshops
for young people with disabilities ages 14 – 21 and for adults with disabilities.
For the past four years I have been addressing the questions of hundreds of
people with disability or illness via my website sexualhealth.com, with the help
of some volunteers in this room, namely Drs. Russell Shuttleworth and Linda
Mona.
SEXUAL PLEASURE IN A CULTURAL PERSPECTIVE
The pleasurable aspect of sex in our culture has been largely ignored,
vilified, or exploited. Our families, public schools, religious institutions, and
medical establishment have adopted the “don’t ask, don’t tell ” policy of sexual
education. In fact, the United States government has funded, to the tune of $500
The Missing Discourse of Pleasure 285
million, an abstinence-only-until-marriage act that does not allow for classroom
discussion of sex as a vehicle for expression outside of heterosexual marriage.
The dominant cultural institutions have effectively silenced public discourse of
sex as a source of pleasure in our lives.

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One institution that has not ignored sexual pleasure is the media. However,
the media has exploited sexual pleasure for gain. Sex is portrayed as a privilege
of the white, heterosexual, young, single and non-disabled. Sexual pleasure is
held out as a reward for buying the right product and targeted to markets with
the most disposable income. Sexuality as a source of pleasure and as an expres-sion of love is not readily recognized for populations that have been tradi-tionally marginalized in society. Sexual portrayals of people who are older, who
are larger, who are darker, who are gayer, who are mentally or physically dis-abled, or who just do not fit the targeted market profile have been conspicu-ously absent in mainstream media.
The discussion of pleasure in populations such as women, older Ameri-cans, large sized people, gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered individuals,
and children is also underrepresented in the medical or scientific research litera-ture. This is equally true for people with disabilities. A biologically determinate
viewpoint of sex as solely the province of reproduction, and reproduction solely
the province of the fittest, usually those with access to the full enjoyment of
citizenship, has largely served to exclude people with disabilities. In addition, a
social cultural viewpoint of sex as a source of danger leads to the presumed
need to protect us. Disabled populations are not viewed as acceptable candi-dates for reproduction or even capable of sex for pleasure. We are viewed as
child-like and in need of protection.
Alex Comfort in Sexual Consequences of Disability (6) summed up the
situation as follows:
Besides the pressures of folklore, individuals whose mobility is limited or whose defor-mity is evident are exposed to other forms of attack upon their sense of worth and
desirability. Cultural constructs, such as a wholly unrealistic emphasis on physical
beauty or strength as an index of being desirable, and the practical barriers of finding a
partner, all combine to make the aim of sexual self-validation seem better given up; the
relief of hospital staff and relatives with this renunciation becomes evident and may
contribute to it, even though they do nothing to remedy the frustration and loss of self-value which may accompany it. (p. 3)
Societal attitudes toward people with disabilities have largely served to quiet
both personal and political discourse on sexual pleasure and disabilities until
most recently.
SEXUAL PLEASURE: A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
We have a tendency to explain American avoidance of frank discussions of
sexuality on our American Puritan Ethic. While it is true we can trace much of
286 Tepper
our sexual phobias to the Puritans, the root of the problem goes back over 2000
years. A review of the history of pleasure in western philosophy, religion, and
science lends insight to the development of modern day sexual mores held by
cultural institutions including family, school, religion, medicine, and law. Sex-ual pleasure has been conceptualized as a lesser good, a sin, a sickness, and a
perversion.

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Western thinking and attitudes about sexual pleasure can be traced back to
Greek dualistic thought juxtaposing soul and body. Pleasures of the flesh were
ranked as the lowest of goods based on the superiority of the soul and reason.
Plato relegated sexual desire to the lowest element of the psyche because “cop-ulation lowered a man to the frenzied passions characteristic of beasts” (7, p.
14). The Catholic Church adopted many of the Greek ’s philosophical tenants
about bodily pleasures and, over time, strengthened the negative attitudes and
beliefs about sexual pleasure, promoting sexual pleasure to the status of sin (7).
It is not until the period of the Renaissance and reformation (circa 1500 CE)
when Puritans reared their heads. The Puritans and later the Victorians in the
late 1700s to mid 1800s endowed us with the first system of laws against
“obscene” or objectionable words including any direct reference to sexual mat-ters.
In the late 18th century and early 19th century with the increased popu-larity and reliance on doctors and the medical profession, sexual pleasure was
thought of or viewed as disease or sickness instead of sin, making it now a
medical problem. According to Bullough and Bullough (7), the adoption of the
medical model of sexuality substituted the view that all nonprocreative sexual
activity was a sign of sickness for the earlier conception of sexuality as sin.
Physicians  “conceived their purpose to be a moral one ” (p. 220), emphasizing
the dangers of premarital, extramarital, or unusual sexual activities, not the
pleasures of sex, and thus impaired the understanding of the physiological and
psychological importance of sex in human beings (7).

 

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From this point on, the
medical profession including psychiatry has played a central role in defining
what is normal sexual behavior and what is deviant.
With the turn of the century came Freud and the advent of psychoanalytic
theory when deviations from the heterosexual procreative model of sex were
softened to the status of immaturity. Oral sex, anal sex, clitoral orgasms, inver-sion (what we know as homosexuality), lingering at foreplay were all perver-sions (8). Feelings of loathing, shame, fear and pain, as well as moral and
aesthetic demands, were supposed to keep us on the path toward the definite
and  “excepted normal limits” or sexual aim of heterosexual intercourse.
It was not until the mid 20th-century with the groundbreaking research of
Alfred Kinsey (9,10) and Masters and Johnson (11) that sex and sexual pleasure
began to be demystified and normalized as a natural part of life in the United
States and worthy of scientific attention. With the increased attention on sexual
The Missing Discourse of Pleasure 287
pleasure came a heavy focus on sexual performance and orgasm as the goal of
healthy sexual expression. Deviations from  “normal ” sexual response culminat-ing in orgasm as described by Masters and Johnson (11) were viewed as human
sexual inadequacies (12) and began to attract much interest. Human sexual
inadequacies in nondisabled populations became the focus of sex therapy.
While serving to liberate us from restrictive notions of sexuality, the new sex
research with the help of distortions from the media that exploit people ’s sexual
insecurities, has created an orgasm imperative in our culture (13). If someone
who is not disabled does not desire sex, they have hypoactive or inhibited
sexual desire disorder. If a nondisabled person does not have an orgasm, they
have orgasmic disorder and qualify for treatment.
However, if a person with a disability has low sexual desire or does not
experience orgasm, this is not seen as problematic. Neglect of the pleasurable
aspect in the discourse of sexuality and disability is perpetuated by the assump-tion that people with disabilities are child-like and asexual (14), a focus on
procreative sex to the detriment of pleasure (15), and the assumption that peo-ple with disabilities are not physiologically capable of pleasure or orgasm. To
this day, in DSM IV (16), both female and male orgasmic disorder must be
distinguished from a  “Sexual Dysfunction Due to a General Medical Condition ”
(p. 515) when the dysfunction is judged to be due exclusively to the physiologi-cal effects of a specified general medical condition. “Spinal cord lesion ” (p.
506) is used as the example of such a condition in women. This is evidence that
normal science (17) still operates under a paradigm that views orgasmic disor-der in people with at least some disabilities as a given.

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Fortunately, social political movements by other sexually disenfranchised
groups are gaining power and have brought into public discourse the discussion
of sexuality and pleasure among their constituencies, opening doors to research
and writing that address sexual pleasure. Women have found a voice for them-selves through the feminist literature and women like Drs. Beverly Whipple and
Gina Ogden educating other women (18) and telling their stories (19). Gay,
lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered activists continue to make strides in chal-lenging the straight community and have won representation and inclusion in
popular movies and prime-time sitcoms through pressure on Hollywood. Older
Americans have found their sexual voice spurred on by Bob Dole and Pfizer’s
promotion of Viagra, along with recent research on sex and maturity sponsored
by AARP (20).  “Fat” people are speaking out as evidenced in a new book by
Hanne Blank called Big Big Love (21). However, with the exception of works
of a few brave heroines in the disability movement, some noted earlier, and
until the publication of  Sexual Politics of Disability: Untold Desires (4), sexual
pleasure in people with disabilities has remained remarkably silent in the dis-ability advocacy and the disabilities studies agenda. People with disabilities are
just joining the fray.
288 Tepper
WHY DO I THINK SEXUAL PLEASURE IS SO IMPORTANT?
Pleasure is an affirmation of life. Pleasure is often defined as an addition
to life or a form of luxury rather than a centrally motivating and defining fea-ture of social action (22). Virginia Johnson (23), speaking to the significance of
sexual pleasure, refers to pleasure as  “the authentic, abiding satisfaction that
makes us feel like complete human beings” (p. 28). Pleasure adds meaning to
our lives. Sexual pleasure is particularly powerful in making one feel alive. It is
an anecdote to pain, both physical and emotional. In fact, the analgesic effect of
sexual pleasure has actually been measured in laboratory studies (15,24). Sex-ual pleasure can enhance an intimate relationship. It can add a sense of connect-nedness to the world or to each other. It can heal a sense of emotional isolation
so many of us feel even though we are socially integrated. It can help build our
immunity against media messages that can make us feel as if we don ’t deserve
pleasure.
CONSEQUENCES OF IGNORING PLEASURE
When we do not include a discourse of pleasure we perpetuate our asexual
and victimization status. We do nothing to alleviate what I see as endemic low
sexual self-esteem among the many people with disabilities and illness who
participate in my research or who come to me for help. Negative sexual mes-sages about people with disabilities fuel negative attitudes and misguided be-liefs about sexual potential and take their toll on sexual self-esteem. Low sexual
self-esteem combined with the likes of physical limitations,

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diminished sensa-tion, lack of escalating arousal, difficulty with ejaculation, or difficulty with
orgasm may make sex and sexual relationships seem pointless, may reaffirm
unexpressed beliefs of asexuality, and may lead to the conclusion  “why bother. ”
In my dissertation research I explored knowledge, attitudes, beliefs, and
cognitive processes that impede or facilitate sexual pleasure in people with
SCT. After injury things were “not the same.” There were concerns about being
sexual in the  “normal ” way. Feelings of  “not the same” were rooted in who,
what, where, and how participants learned about sexuality in the larger sexual
culture. These changes experienced in comparison to memories of what was
normal for them before injury resulted in intrusive and uncontrollable thoughts
during sexual activity. The absence of quality sexuality education combined
with learning about sex primarily from having genital intercourse, led to sexu-ality embodied in the genitals and cognitively focused on perfect performance
with the goal of orgasm. Click here to place an order  for a similar  paper  and have  exceptional work done by our team and get A+resultsThis genitally focused and performance oriented con-ception of sexuality presented developmental challenges to optimizing sexual
potential after injury for all participants. Learning about sex from having sex
The Missing Discourse of Pleasure 289
and from media that exploits the pleasurable aspects of sex and not learning
about other aspects of sex from family, schools, clergy, or doctors resulted in
consequences like low sexual self-esteem and lost hope that surfaced when
genital sensations and function were  “not the same” or impaired along with
other bodily functions subsequent to SCI. Participants who relearned how to
experience pleasure and even orgasm after SCI believed early on that there was
more possible and that their sexuality was their responsibility. They learned
more about their spinal cord injured bodies, introduced fantasy; embraced the
disability and rejected sexist and ablest ideals, and were fortunate enough to
experience sex with a significant sexual partner. The deliberate inclusion of
pleasure in this research brought to light the most compelling issues around
sexuality and disability for the participants.
THE REAL ACCESSIBILITY ISSUE
In the words of Benjamin Seaman, a visitor to sexualhealth.com, access to
pleasure is  “the real accessibility issue. ”

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inclusion means access to pleasure. It means a reasonable chance for relation-ships. The blame cannot all be placed on society. We as a group must push
forward this agenda, educate ourselves, and share what we know to be real
truths about sexuality with the non-disabled community that is equally crippled
by distortions of sexuality in the media. We must be advocates for the inclusion
of sexual pleasure in disability studies, politics, and public discourse.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This study was funded by the National Institutes of Health Predoctoral
Fellowship Award for Students with Disabilities.
This paper is based on my doctoral dissertation research conducted at the
University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education Program in Human
Sexuality Education, Philadelphia, PA.Click here to place an order  for a similar  paper  and have an exceptional work done by our team and get A+results
REFERENCES
1.  Fine M: Sexuality, schooling, and adolescent females: the missing discourse of desire. Harvard
Educational Review 58(1): 29– 53, 1988.
2. Waxman BF: It ’s Time to Politicize Our Sexual Repression, The Ragged Edge: The Disability
Experience from the Pages of the first Fifteen Years of The Disability Rag. Edited by Shaw B.
Louisville, The Advocado Press, 1991, pp. 82 – 87.
3. Bullard DG, Knight SE: Sexuality and Physical Disability: Personal Perspectives. St. Louis,
C. V. Mosby Company, 1981, pp. 318.
290 Tepper
4. Shakespeare T, Gillespie-Sells K, Davies D: The Sexual Politics of Disability: Untold Desires.
London, Cassell, 1996.
5. Tepper MS: Providing comprehensive sexual health care in spinal cord injury rehabilitation:
Continuing education and training for health care professionals. Huntington, CT, Mitchell Tep-per, 1997.
6. Comfort A: Sexual Consequences of Disability. Philadelphia George F. Stickley Company,
1978.
7. Bullough VL, Bullough B: Sin, Sickness, and Sanity. New York, New American Library, 1977.
8. Freud S: Three Contributions to the Theory of Sex. New York, Nervous and Mental Disease
Publishing, 1930.
9. Kinsey AC, Pomeroy WB, Martin CE: Sexual Behavior in the Human Male. Philadelphia,
W. B. Saunders Co., 1948.
10. Kinsey AC, Pomeroy WB, Martin CE, Gebhard PH: Sexual Behavior in the Human Female.
Philadelphia, W. B. Saunders Company, 1953.
11. Masters WH, Johnson EJ: Human Sexual Response. Boston, Little, Brown and Company, 1966.
12. Masters WH, Johnson V: Human Sexual Inadequacy. Boston, Little, Brown, 1970.
13. Gardetto DC: Engendered sensations social construction of the clitoris and female orgasm,

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1650– 1975, Graduate Division. Davis, University of California, 1992, pp. 350.
14. Fine M, Asch A: Women with Disabilities: Essays in Psychology, Culture, and Politics. Phila-delphia, Temple University Press, 1988, pp. 347.
15. Whipple B, Richards E, Tepper M, Komisaruk BR: Sexual response in women with complete
spinal cord injury, Woman with Physical Disabilities. Edited by Krotoski DM, Nosek MA, Turk
MA. Baltimore, Paul Brookes, 1996, pp. 69 – 80.
16. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. Washington D.C., American Psychiatric
Association, 1994.
17. Kuhn TS: The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Chicago, The University of Chicago Press,
1970.
18. Whipple B, Ogden G: Safe Encounters: How Women Can Say Yes to Pleasure and No to
Unsafe Sex. New York, Pocket Books, 1989.
19. Ogden G: Women Who Love Sex. New York, Pocket Books, 1994.
20. Jacoby S: Great Sex: What’s Age Got to do with It? Special Report on the AARP/Modern
Maturity survey on sexual attitudes and behaviors, Modern Maturity, 1999, p. 41– 45, 91.
21. Blank H: Big Big Love: a sourcebook on sex for people of size and those who love them. San
Francisco, Greenery Press, 2000.
22. Tiger L: The Pursuit of Pleasure. Boston, Little, Brown and Company, 1992.
23. Masters WH, Johnson VH: The Pleasure Bond: A New Look at Sexuality and Commitment.
Boston, Little, Brown and Company, 1974.
24. Whipple B, Komisaruk BR: Elevation of pain threshold by vaginal stimulation in women. Pain
21(4): 357– 67, 1985.

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Sexuality and Disability

Sexuality and disability is a phrase that is used to refer to the sexual behavior and practice of sex among the people with disabilities. This area remains a very sensitive one with increased beliefs, taboos and limited exploration. According to the world health organization, sexuality is an essential part of the personality of everyone. The definition extends to specify that it can be among men, women or a child and it is a basic need and aspect of being human that cannot be separated from other forms of life. In the modern day, it is very disappointing that people with disabilities are regarded to as people with no sex life. Further research shows that sex is highly associated with physical attractiveness, fertility and is mostly dominant among the youths. When sex is discussed in the light of disability, we learn that it is done with regard to fertility, capacity and technique among other things. However, it is worth noting that in this instance, sexual feelings are no reference hence touching, affection and emotions are not part of the ordeal for this group. For thisa research essay, we shall explore the concept of disability and sexuality in the light of modern trends and perceptions towards the act.

According to an article by Esmail et. Al, the researchers embraced a qualitative approach in exploring the attitudes and perceptions with which people view sexuality and disability (Esmail, et. Al, 2010). The main purpose of the research was to describe the current societal perceptions and attitudes on the sexuality and disability and at the same time determine how stigma differs when it comes to people with visible disabilities and those with no visible disabilities. The findings of the research were that, individuals who are deemed as disabled are asexual. This is the case due to the heteronormative idea of sex and this is considered as natural (Esmail, et. Al, 2010). According to the researchers, we notice that lack of education on sexuality and disability was one of the major factors that they felt to contribute highly to the stigma that is associated with the disability and sexuality. According to a research that has been developed by Christian vega and Shirley, the research findings were that, there is a symbiotic relationship between the sex workers and the disabled persons. This is in terms of the need of the sex workers to obtain the money in return for love and sex from the sex workers.

In the Victorian sex industry, we find out that the program is a statewide program that allows prostitutes to conduct their businesses in certain designated places. The research explores the pros and cons that come with handling the disabled noting of a particular group that has chosen to provide the services only to the disabled. They also note that there is less stigmatization associated with the disabled in the program and they also feel good about themselves. Some of the available services are through what they call the RhED program and include education, distribution of safe sex supplies, information and referral services for the sex industry, as well as community safety initiatives (Aunos, and Feldman, 2002). The program has been one of the major ways through which the society has cared for the sexual needs of the disabled in the state of Victoria.

According to a publication by The Guardian, the magazine states “The sex worker says she is used to being introduced to clients with disabilities through a parent, usually a mother rather than a father…” (The guardian, 2013) through this excerpt, we understand that the sex workers are playing an important role in aIDressing the concerns of this group. An important piece from one of the mothers whose son had limited days in his life notes that since she brought the sex worker down to her place and had her attend to her son’s sexual needs, “…and says her son is much happier all round since having her visit.” the lesson from this expirience is that as much as the normal people need the sexual pleasure and attention, the disabled in the society need it as well. In Netherlands, there was a report that the government was willing to cover the expenses of 12 occasions of sexual service through a government funded scheme for the persons with disabilities in the society. According to the same report, a similar situation was noted in the United Kingdom, where a chief activist Chris Fulton known to suffer from cerebral palsy and muscular dystrophy asked the government to come up with a similar scheme (Hahn, 1988).

The report noted that the disabled need a larger choice and there was a lot of stigmatization on the part of the disabled having relationships. The author noted that there was need for the disabled to be accepted when they have relationships. According to a survey conducted on disability by Disability Now magazine, the findings concluded that 19% of the female participants saw trained sex workers as compared to the 63% male respondents who did (Baxter, 2008). According to this study, there was the insight into a hiIDen perspective that, female persons with disabilities do not trust sex workers to be honorable and thus the low turn up. The limitation to participate in sexual activities by the disabled extends to the male counterparts too. This is because there are cases of abuse and sometimes may turn into physical abuse. It is thus evident that participation in the sexual affair is more risky and sometimes may trigger rejection that this group cannot cope with.

Assault, Domestic violence and sexual harassment

People with disabilities are often regarded to as vulnerable persons. This is in the light that they often face violence and rude treatment from people hence needs protecting. According to an American Journal of Preventive Medicine publications, men with disabilities are 4 times more likely to be abused sexually (Baxter, 2008). Others have also shown that women with disability are more likely expirience rape, physical assult and abuse regardless of their race, ethnicity, orientation or class. The risks of being assaulted physically in adults who suffer from this disabilities range from 4-10 times higher than those of other adults (Baxter, 2008). For most of the disabled persons, the violence may be orchestrated by a relative, a sex worker or other people in his/her life therefore it becomes hard to determine whether they are suffering as they tend to conceal it.

There is need to develop a strategy that will take care of this population like the state of Virginia. Battling for the married disabled persons is also a frequent phenomenon as most of the disabled have developed as tendency to suffer in silence. Some of them dare not speak due to the stigma associated with raising such concerns. We learn that people with disabilities are viewed as a population that has no rights. They are viewed often as people with no right to pursue their social and sexual relationships. They have been in the dark for long and consequently denied sex education. There has been concerns over the several number of cases reported among those admitted with mental conditions that doctors tend to take advantage over their situations and thus sexually harass them or rape them. These tendencies have been widely ignored bearing in mind that the perpetrators are the people who should protect them.

In some of the situations, sexual harassment has been on the rise especially in hospitals, whereby doctors and medical practitioners have been also known to take advantage of their patients.

With the recent developments in technology, studies have shown that people with disabilities can derive sexual pleasure through the use of sex toys and physical aids among other things. The physical aids in this case involves the use of bed modifications that assist in developing better sex positions, or the services that are offered by a commercial sex worker. According to an unknown author who published in the guardian by the pseudonym Stefano Goodman, he noted that he is used to the fact that the people with disability are sexually invisible. He notes that the number where a person has looked at him and noted that he /she will have some of “that” or “thank you very much” are countable by hand. It is imperative that this group is less appreciated in the society even by the very people they claimed to know. Instead, the wheelchair is more invisible making them captives in their own life.

It is important also to note that self-image and disability are closely intertwined factors. We develop the school of thought that self-image is an essential part of one’s sexuality and in the event that it is not good enough, one loses all the will to pursue sexual desires. For most of the persons with disability, we learn that they suffer from emotional and psychological burden arising from their impairments. Most of the people with disability fear rejection as we have mentioned earlier and thus, they may feel a little bit awkward in pursuing their desired relationships. The self-image referred to greatly suffers from the effects of disfigurement and thus lack of confidence. In this light, we note that everything that the person with disability tries is related to his or her physical condition and their ability to perform sexually. The only way to solve this is by accepting their disability and living with it along other life activities.

Many scholars have suggested that good communication, daunting; medication as well as manual devices are a good start for sexual activity especially where disability is concerned. The recognition of the pleasure that is often derived from other activities, in this case, not penetration or intercourse is an integral factor that should be recognized by this persons. Such activities that derive pleasure include, sensitivity to touch, that has been known to increase lesion location especially in cases where the patient has suffered from a spinal injury or some form of paralysis. According to a research carried out by the Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundations, the findings were that 79% of the men suffering from incomplete spinal cord injuries and 28% with complete injuries are able to achieve orgasm (Livneh, 2000). Where hand mobility has been impaired, the study showed that vibrators can be used in stimulation. Supportive devices that we had earlier discussed are further elaborated, and the author notes that, sex furniture can be a major boost to the ergonomics in sex, with rail and clamp enhancements or unique designs being used depending on the needs of the person (Livneh, 2000).

In paraplegic and quadriplegic people, there is a need to understand that the loss of sexual function does not mean the loss of sexuality. for such cases, recognition that sexual functioning can be increased despite being impaired is key. In the event of a spinal cord injury, it is evident that sexual function is usually intact and that it is only the communication that takes place from the brain and the spine center that is usually disrupted. In the event that there is no sensation that remains in the sexual organs, the sexual sensation of orgasm is lost though there is a high chance that an orgasm may be experienced in other parts of the body (Davis and MSSW, 2005). Despite the presence of an injury, it is worth noting that the physical and emotional part of life is still highly functional for this group as it is for the people with no disabilities.

When we look at the above literature, we realize that disability is one of the major hindrances to sexual activity for many people with disability (Davis and MSSW, 2005). There is need to intervene in the event that they are not okay with who they are. The first step to initiate the plan of action should be talking to them into accepting who they are. This process involves the use of professional counselors and qualified personnel among others. This people may have a problem in approaching the issue therefore, it is important to come up with a style that is based on the needs of every client. After they are able to see a practitioner and accept themselves, another major step is to engage them on their desires and some of the things they think would make them more sexually active.

In the modern age, there is need to fight the stigma that is associated with people with disability regard their sex life and their ability to be in relationships. Stigmatization is one of the highest contributors of a bad sexual orientation (Davis and MSSW, 2005). There is need to educate the public on the need to accept them and allow them to freely have relationships like anyone else. The need to understand that the PWD have a choice is also an important factor. This group has the right to emotional development and exploration, as well as social development. They also have to be protected from violence of any form as well as abuse by anyone, whether their partners or not. This need comes with a call to the state to impose stringent rules that are aimed at protecting the sexual rights of such individuals. Campaigns to educate the public on the sexuality of the disabled should also be set on the go to enhance their acceptance into the society.

The state has a very crucial role to play apart from policy formulation and the protection of the rights of this people. It is important that the state takes care of the need of this people through the use of professionals who attend to them rather than leaving them to look for the sex workers on the streets, where they are often abused and disregarded. For most of the people with disabilities, the sex worker has to clean them, dress them and perform the sex orientation before engaging in sex with him/her (Hahn, 1988). This is a very hectic activity and only required highly trained professionals who know how to specially handle this kind of people. Most of them may tend to have bad reactions to various orientations therefore, there is need to develop a mindset that is customer centered as opposed to one that is centered along the expectations of the sex worker.

Payment for these workers is also a big deal. There is need for the government to chip in and contribute to meeting the costs of this need. This is because the PWD have limited capacities to earn high incomes or make such high payments (Powersand and Oschwald, 2004). a legislation is needed to enable the sex workers to operate freely with the PWD in a controlled environment where abuse is likely to occur. Use of sex aides is an important part of this effort. More importantly, vibrators can be very helpful for people with limited ability in their limbs. The use of modern technology that includes appropriate ergonomics can be an important part on the sexuality of an individual.

When sexuality is combined with proper ergonomics, there is likelihood that the individuals may derive as much pleasure as would be possible with a human partner (Powersand and Oschwald, 2004). This saves the persons with disability the effort to move to brothels or look for sex workers in the streets. It also saves then the stigma of being shunned away or being abused. When the use of technology is adopted, the people with disability have the capacity to obtain sexual pleasure as often as they need it at a low cost, unlike when engaging with a sexual worker, there is no limits as to when one should have sexual pleasure, rather, one can have it any time and at any state. For those who hate the showering, the clothing and the various orientations that come with sex workers, the technological modifications are in place to attend to their needs.

In conclusion, people with disabilities often face a lot of challenges when it comes to their sexuality. First, they are not able to access sex as freely as their normal counterparts. In most instances, they are discriminated against and thought not to have the desire or the ability to be sexually active. Stigma is also another issue. The society view persons with disabilities as a group of people who should not engage in relationships but should concentrate with dealing with their disabilities. A major perspective is also that, the battle is from within; such that the PWD does not accept him/herself hence, it becomes hard to build a good image of oneself. This affects ones ego and limits his/her abilities to explore their sexuality. Abuse is also another major factor that affects the sexuality of this group. However, there is a high chance that technology has been able to solve most of the problem through its ability to meet their different needs from different aspects and positions.

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