Talk:Erectile dysfunction

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Epidemiology

There has to be a section "Epidemiology", below is an information for that section.

There is an information about epidemiology in section "Treatment" (why there) with a ref to the research of 2016 (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28032424/).

In a study published in 2016, based on US health insurance claims data, out of 19,833,939 US males aged ≥18 years, only 1,108,842 (5.6%), were medically diagnosed with erectile dysfunction or on a PDE5I prescription (μ age 55.2 years, σ 11.2 years). Prevalence of diagnosis or prescription was the highest for age group 60–69 at 11.5%, lowest for age group 18–29 at 0.4%, and 2.1% for 30–39, 5.7% for 40–49, 10% for 50–59, 11% for 70–79, 4.6% for 80–89, 0.9% for ≥90, respectively.[1]

There is another research of 2018 with different patient bases and almost the same results (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29569323/)

Another study with data for 48 millions men from different bases has the same results. Of the 9,839,578 who met the inclusion criteria, 573,313 (6%) were ED patients and 9,266,265 (94%) were non-ED patients. ED diagnosis increased decade to decade from 18-29 years to 50-59 years but decreased from 60-69 years to 90 years.[2]

There is also an information from DSM-5 about erectile problems on first sexual experience:

According to DSM-5 about 20% of men fear of erectile problems on their first sexual experience, whereas approximately 8% experienced erectile problems that hindered penetration during first sexual experience. Such erectile failure is related to having sex with a previously unknown partner, concomitant use of drugs or alcohol, not wanting to have sex, and peer pressure. Evidence regarding the persistence of such problems after the first sex attempt is minimal. Most of these problems remit without professional help, but some men may continue to have episodic problems.[3]

References

  1. ^ Mulhall JP, Luo X, Zou KH, Stecher V, Galaznik A (December 2016). "Relationship between age and erectile dysfunction diagnosis or treatment using real-world observational data in the USA". International Journal of Clinical Practice. 70 (12): 1012–1018. doi:10.1111/ijcp.12908. PMC 5540144. PMID 28032424.
  2. ^ Irwin Goldstein, Richard Chambers, WingYu Tang, Vera Stecher, Tarek Hassan (April 2018). "Real-world observational results from a database of 48 million men in the United States: Relationship of cardiovascular disease, diabetes mellitus and depression with age and erectile dysfunction". International Journal of Clinical Practice. 72 (4). doi:10.1111/ijcp.13078. PMID 29569323. {{cite journal}}: Vancouver style error: name in name 1 (help)
  3. ^ DSM-5, Page 427