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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page research paper that offers a definition of sexual addiction and briefly describes therapy options. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KL9_khsexadd.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
person, which involves exposing a sexual partner to the risk of sexually transmitted disease or to the possibility of abandonment due to the dissolution of a marriage. The norms of
society include the expectation that adults are capable confining their sexual behavior within specific limits and boundaries. The following examination of sexual behavior, first of all, examines what sexual addiction
is and then considers methods of treatment that offer a solution to this frequently devastating behavioral problem. Defining sexual addiction is precisely is problematic, which is evident in the
fact that committees associated with the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) have not identified sufficient evidence that designates sexual addiction as a psychiatric disorder (Levine, 2010). Nevertheless, there are social
expectations about sexual conduct that are intended to support marriages and preserve the dignity, health and safety of a partner who has the expectation of monogamy, as well as protect
children from the trauma of divorce (Levine, 2010). While there is more leniency in these expectations in regards to unmarried individuals, there are also social expectations that apply to them
and when behavior strays outside these boundaries, it is regarded as a violation of social and developmental norms (Levine, 2010). A definition for sexual addiction proposed by Orford
is that this is a "maladaptive pattern of use and impaired control over a behavior with associated adverse consequences" (Garcia and Thibaut, 2010, p. 255). While it is true that
controversy remains over how to define sexual addiction, the DSM-IV refers to this behavior, defining it as "Distress about a pattern of repeated sexual relationships involving a succession of lovers,
who are experienced by the individual only as things to be used" (Garcia and Thibaut, 2010, p. 255). There are numerous ways in which therapy is addressed in order
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