Within six months after giving birth at a London hospital, nine in 10 women answering survey questions about their sexual and mental health had resumed intercourse, but two-thirds of those who had said that sex was less frequent and four in 10 said that it was less satisfying than it had been before they became pregnant. Twelve percent of women suffered postpartum depression; these women were less likely than others to report having resumed intercourse and were more likely to say that they had started having sex too soon after delivering. The proportions of women reporting sexual problems such as pain during intercourse were elevated three months after delivery; they were lower, but remained above prepregnancy levels, at six months postpartum. This pattern was the same regardless of whether women were depressed, although problems were more common among women with postpartum depression.
REFERENCE
1. Morof D et al., Postnatal depression and sexual health after childbirth, Obstetrics & Gynecology, 2003, 102(6): 1318-1325.