![]() I see stats all the time reading, 'It's increased 1,000 per cent in young men'. ![]() "When you look representatively, there has not been an increase in erectile dysfunction. However, Nicole Prause, a neuroscientist who specialises in sexual behaviour, says there is little scientific and statistical evidence of a growth in the prevalence of ED. ![]() According to the Irish Heart Foundation, 18 per cent of men aged 50 to 59, 38 per cent of men aged between 60 and 69 and 57 per cent of men aged over 70 suffer from the condition. Many believe erectile dysfunction (ED), also known as impotence, is becoming more prevalent in young men. That’s usually a sign things won’t work out.” “In my head I’m telling myself it’ll be fine, but there’s always a voice saying: ‘What if it does happen?’ Then it becomes a physical thing, and my body gets all hot and I feel startled inside. “Every time I went to see my girlfriend, I’d be freaking out,” he says. That was in November 2017, but even after Toby started dating someone else, the problem persisted. Their encounter ended he could no longer perform. “I’ve always had a bit of anxiety about my performance, so she hit a bit of a bedrock there, because I had been thinking about it before.” The woman the 32-year-old was with remarked that he wasn’t hard enough for them to have sex. It was just as things were getting serious in the bathroom at a house party that an off-hand comment ruined the mood for Toby.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |