In the bedroom: Researchers claim that on
average couples who stick to traditional gender roles in the home make
love 20 times more per year
- Couples have sex five times a month on average, U.S. researchers found
- But when wife does all housework they have sex 1.6 times more a month
OK, chaps, put down the vacuum cleaner, step away from the kitchen sink... and head for the bedroom.
Researchers
claim that couples who stick to traditional gender roles in the home
make love 20 times more per year. They found that on average couples
have sex five times a month.
But partnerships where the wife does all
the household tasks reported having sex 1.6 times more per month on
average than those where the husband does all the stereotypical female
chores.
Previous research found
husbands got more bedroom time if they helped around the home,
suggesting that sex was in exchange for housework.
But those studies did not factor in what types of chores the men were doing.
‘Couples in which men
participate more in housework typically done by women report having sex
less frequently,’ said the study’s lead author Dr Sabino Kornrich, of
the Juan March Institute in Madrid.
‘Similarly, couples in which men
participate more in traditionally masculine tasks – such as DIY and car
maintenance – report higher sexual frequency.
Under the covers: Couples in which men participate more in housework typically done by women report having sex less frequently
‘Our findings suggest the importance of socialized gender roles for sexual frequency in heterosexual marriage.’
The researchers examined 4,500 heterosexual US marriages involving couples with an average age in their mid-40s.
The
study by the University of Washington, published in the American
Sociological Review, suggests that adopting traditional gender roles is
important to sexual desire.
‘Our definition of attractiveness is
linked to the ideal of masculinity and femininity,’ said Dr Kornrich.
‘These ideals are not necessarily the most modern and this may be a
hangover of that.’
The scientists ruled out the suggestion that husbands who refused household chores might be more coercive when it came to sex.
‘Wives’
reported satisfaction with their sex life has the same relationship to
men’s participation in household labour as sexual frequency,’ said Dr
Kornrich.
‘Had satisfaction with sex been low, but frequency high, it might have suggested coercion. However, we didn’t find that.’
But
for men hoping to leave all the work to their wives, there was a
warning. ‘Men who refuse to help around the house could increase
conflict in their marriage and lower their wives’ marital satisfaction,’
said Dr Kornrich.
‘Research has found that women’s marital satisfaction is indeed linked to men’s participation in overall household labour.’
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