AARP Hearing Center

I’ve heard a lot of jokes about rampant sex taking place in senior living communities — and the resultant sexually transmitted infections. You know what? It is a real problem, and it’s not funny.
This week, our experts weigh in on this important — and sadly underdiscussed — topic.
I just moved into an independent senior living community, and the men here flit from one woman to the next. I know sexually transmitted infections are a thing in this age group. I’m a single female. Any suggestions on how to date safely?
I’m so glad you asked this question — and so are our specialists.
As sex coach Stella Harris notes, “In sex-ed circles, there’s so much talk about how to get more education in spaces like retirement communities and assisted living facilities because this is such a known problem. Unfortunately, there’s a lack of information in the places that need it the most.”
Sexually transmitted infections, or STIs, are spiking in the older adult population: more than doubling among those 65 and up in the last decade, according to the American Medical Association.

In the Mood
For AARP’s In the Mood column, writer Ellen Uzelac will ask experts your most pressing 50+ sex and relationship questions. Uzelac is the former West Coast bureau chief for The Baltimore Sun. She writes frequently on sex, relationships, travel and lifestyle issues.
First, what’s driving all that sex? According to Harris, many people in senior communities are going through “a second adolescence” and experiencing a kind of sexual freedom they’ve never known before.
There’s a built-in social network and huge access to potential partners, not unlike what you would experience on a college campus or any other type of communal living, she says.
So why reach for a condom? Jeffrey Kwong, a professor at Rutgers University’s School of Nursing, says that since pregnancy is no longer a risk, some older people tend not to take protective measures.
There’s also a societal perception that STIs are usually contracted by younger people. “That is a myth,” says Kwong, who is also associate medical director for the American Academy of HIV Medicine’s HIV & Aging Project.
One other issue: Health care providers may not be talking to older patients about sex. “If you don’t bring it up, they probably won’t either,” he says. “That’s a missed opportunity.”
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