

Homosexual Health Risks
John R. Diggs, Jr. M.D.
As a physician, it is my duty to assess behaviors for their impact on health and wellbeing. When something is beneficial, such as exercise, good nutrition, or adequate sleep, it is my duty to recommend it. Likewise, when something is harmful, such as smoking, overeating, alcohol or drug abuse, and homosexual sex, it is my duty to discourage it.
Sexual relationships between members of the same sex expose gays, lesbians and bisexuals to extreme risks of Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs), physical injuries, mental disorders and even a shortened life span. There are five major distinctions between gay and heterosexual relationships, with specific medical consequences. They are:
Levels of Promiscuity
Prior to the AIDS epidemic, a 1978 study found that 75 percent of white, gay males
claimed to have had more than 100 lifetime male sex partners: 15 percent claimed
100-
Similar extremes of promiscuity have not been documented among lesbians. However, an Australian study found that 93 percent of lesbians reported having had sex with men, and lesbians were 4.5 times more likely than heterosexual women to have had more than 50 lifetime male sex partners. Any degree of sexual promiscuity carries the risk of contracting STDs.
Physical Health
Common sexual practices among gay men lead to numerous STDs and physical injuries,
some of which are virtually unknown in the heterosexual population. Lesbians are
also at higher risk for STDs. In addition to diseases that may be transmitted during
lesbian sex, a study at an Australian STD clinic found that lesbians were three to
four times more likely than heterosexual women to have sex with men who were high-
Mental Health
It is well established that there are high rates of psychiatric illnesses, including depression, drug abuse, and suicide attempts, among gays and lesbians. This is true even in the Netherlands, where gay, lesbian and bisexual (GLB) relationships are far more socially acceptable than in the U.S. Depression and drug abuse are strongly associated with risky sexual practices that lead to serious medical problems.
Life Span
The only epidemiological study to date on the life span of gay men concluded that gay and bisexual men lose up to 20 years of life expectancy.
Monogamy
Monogamy, meaning long-
Encouraging people to engage in risky sexual behavior undermines good health and can result in a shortened life span. Yet that is exactly what employers and governmental entities are doing when they grant GLB couples benefits or status that make GLB relationships appear more socially acceptable.
The Health Risks of Gay Sex
Back in the early 1980s, while working at Beth Israel Hospital, I vividly remember seeing healthy young gay men dying of a mysterious disease that researchers only later identified as a sexually transmitted disease — AIDS. Over the years, I've seen many patients with that diagnosis die.
As a physician, it is my duty to assess behaviors for their impact on health and wellbeing. When something is beneficial, such as exercise, good nutrition, or adequate sleep, it is my duty to recommend it. Likewise, when something is harmful, such as smoking, overeating, alcohol or drug abuse, it is my duty to discourage it.
When sexual activity is practiced outside of marriage, the consequences can be quite serious. Without question, sexual promiscuity frequently spreads diseases, from trivial to serious to deadly. In fact, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that 65 million Americans have an incurable sexually transmitted disease (STD).1
There are differences between men and women in the consequences of same-
I. Differences Between Homosexual and Heterosexual Relationships
The current media portrayal of gay and lesbian relationships is that they are as healthy, stable and loving as heterosexual marriages — or even more so.2 Medical associations are promoting somewhat similar messages.3 Nevertheless, there are at least five major areas of differences between gay and heterosexual relationships, each with specific medical consequences. Those differences include:
A. Levels of promiscuity
B. Physical health
C. Mental health
D. Life span
E. Definition
of "monogamy"
A. Promiscuity
Gay author Gabriel Rotello notes the perspective of many gays that "Gay liberation
was founded . . . on a 'sexual brotherhood of promiscuity,' and any abandonment of
that promiscuity would amount to a 'communal betrayal of gargantuan proportions.'"4
Rotello's perception of gay promiscuity, which he criticizes, is consistent with
survey results. A far-
In more recent years, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control has reported an upswing in promiscuity, at least among young homosexual men in San Francisco. From 1994 to 1997, the percentage of homosexual men reporting multiple partners and unprotected anal sex rose from 23.6 percent to 33.3 percent, with the largest increase among men under 25.7 Despite its continuing incurability, AIDS no longer seems to deter individuals from engaging in promiscuous gay sex.8
The data relating to gay promiscuity were obtained from self-
Excessive sexual promiscuity results in serious medical consequences — indeed, it
is a recipe for transmitting disease and generating an epidemic.11 The HIV/AIDS epidemic
has remained a predominantly gay issue in the U.S. primarily because of the greater
degree of promiscuity among gays.12 A study based upon statistics from 1986 through
1990 estimated that 20-
"Experts believe syphilis is on the rise among gay and bisexual men because they are engaging in unprotected sex with multiple partners, many of whom they met in anonymous situations such as sex clubs, adult bookstores, meetings through the Internet and in bathhouses. The new data will show that in the 93 cases involving gay and bisexual men this year, the group reported having 1,225 sexual partners."15
A study done in Baltimore and reported in the Archives of Internal Medicine found that gay men contracted syphilis at three to four times the rate of heterosexuals.16 Promiscuity is the factor most responsible for the extreme rates of these and other Sexually Transmitted Diseases cited below, many of which result in a shortened life span for men who have sex with men.
Promiscuity among lesbians is less extreme, but it is still higher than among heterosexual
women. Overall, women tend to have fewer sex partners than men. But there is a surprising
finding about lesbian promiscuity in the literature. Australian investigators reported
that lesbian women were 4.5 times more likely to have had more than 50 lifetime male
partners than heterosexual women (9 percent of lesbians versus 2 percent of heterosexual
women); and 93 percent of women who identified themselves as lesbian reported a history
of sex with men.17 Other studies similarly show that 75-
B. Physical Health
Unhealthy sexual behaviors occur among both heterosexuals and homosexuals. Yet the medical and social science evidence indicate that homosexual behavior is uniformly unhealthy. Although both male and female homosexual practices lead to increases in Sexually Transmitted Diseases, the practices and diseases are sufficiently different that they merit separate discussion.
1. Male Homosexual Behavior
Men having sex with other men leads to greater health risks than men having sex with women19 not only because of promiscuity but also because of the nature of sex among men. A British researcher summarizes the danger as follows:
"Male homosexual behaviour is not simply either 'active' or 'passive,' since penile-
Although the specific activities addressed below may be practiced by heterosexuals at times, homosexual men engage in these activities to a far greater extent.21
a. Anal-
Anal intercourse is the sine qua non of sex for many gay men.22 Yet human physiology
makes it clear that the body was not designed to accommodate this activity. The rectum
is significantly different from the vagina with regard to suitability for penetration
by a penis. The vagina has natural lubricants and is supported by a network of muscles.
It is composed of a mucus membrane with a multi-
The potential for injury is exacerbated by the fact that the intestine has only a single layer of cells separating it from highly vascular tissue, that is, blood. Therefore, any organisms that are introduced into the rectum have a much easier time establishing a foothold for infection than they would in a vagina. The single layer tissue cannot withstand the friction associated with penile penetration, resulting in traumas that expose both participants to blood, organisms in feces, and a mixing of bodily fluids.
Furthermore, ejaculate has components that are immunosuppressive. In the course of ordinary reproductive physiology, this allows the sperm to evade the immune defenses of the female. Rectal insemination of rabbits has shown that sperm impaired the immune defenses of the recipient.23 Semen may have a similar impact on humans.24
The end result is that the fragility of the anus and rectum, along with the immunosuppressive
effect of ejaculate, make anal-
Anal Cancer
Chlamydia trachomatis
Cryptosporidium
Giardia lamblia
Herpes simplex virus
Human
immunodeficiency virus
Human papilloma virus
Isospora belli
Microsporidia
Gonorrhea
Viral
hepatitis types B & C
Syphilis25
Sexual transmission of some of these diseases is so rare in the exclusively heterosexual
population as to be virtually unknown. Others, while found among heterosexual and
homosexual practitioners, are clearly predominated by those involved in homosexual
activity. Syphilis, for example is found among heterosexual and homosexual practitioners.
But in 1999, King County, Washington (Seattle), reported that 85 percent of syphilis
cases were among self-
A 1988 CDC survey identified 21 percent of all Hepatitis B cases as being homosexually
transmitted while 18 percent were heterosexually transmitted.28 Since homosexuals
comprise such a small percent of the population (only 1-
Anal intercourse also puts men at significant risk for anal cancer. Anal cancer is the result of infection with some subtypes of human papilloma virus (HPV), which are known viral carcinogens. Data as of 1989 showed the rates of anal cancer in male homosexual practitioners to be 10 times that of heterosexual males, and growing. 30 Thus, the prevalence of anal cancer among gay men is of great concern. For those with AIDS, the rates are doubled.31
Other physical problems associated with anal intercourse are:
hemorrhoids
anal fissures
anorectal trauma
retained foreign bodies.32
b. Oral-
There is an extremely high rate of parasitic and other intestinal infections documented
among male homosexual practitioners because of oral-
"Rimming" is the street name given to oralanal contact. It is because of this practice that intestinal parasites ordinarily found in the tropics are encountered in the bodies of American gay men. Combined with anal intercourse and other homosexual practices, "rimming" provides a rich opportunity for a variety of infections.
Men who have sex with men account for the lion's share of the increasing number of
cases in America of sexually transmitted infections that are not generally spread
through sexual contact. These diseases, with consequences that range from severe
and even life-
In America, Human Herpes Virus 8 (called Herpes Type 8 or HHV-
c. Human Waste
Some gay men sexualize human waste, including the medically dangerous practice of
coprophilia, which means sexual contact with highly infectious fecal wastes.47 This
practice exposes the participants to all of the risks of anal-
d. Fisting
"Fisting" refers to the insertion of a hand or forearm into the rectum, and is far
more damaging than anal intercourse. Tears can occur, along with incompetence of
the anal sphincter. The result can include infections, inflammation and, consequently,
enhanced susceptibility to future STDs. Twenty-
e. Sadism
The sexualization of pain and cruelty is described as sadism, named for the 18th
Century novelist, the Marquis de Sade. His novel Justine describes repeated rapes
and non-
f. Conclusion
The consequences of homosexual activity have significantly altered the delivery of
medical care to the population at-
The impact of the health consequences of gay sex is not confined to homosexual practitioners.
Even though nearly 11 million people in America are directly affected by cancer,
compared to slightly more than three-
2. Female Homosexual Behavior
Lesbians are also at higher risk for STDs and other health problems than heterosexuals.59
However, the health consequences of lesbianism are less well documented than for
male homosexuals. This is partly because the devastation of AIDS has caused male
homosexual activity to draw the lion's share of medical attention. But it is also
because there are fewer lesbians than gay men,60 and there is no evidence that lesbians
practice the same extremes of same-
Among the difficulties in establishing the pathologies associated with lesbianism
is the problem of defining who is a lesbian.61 Study after study documents that the
overwhelming majority of self-
Not only did lesbians commonly have sex with men, but with lots of men. They were
4.5 times as likely as exclusively heterosexual controls to have had more than 50
lifetime male sex partners.64 Consequently, the lesbians' median number of male partners
was twice that of exclusively heterosexual women.65 Lesbians were three to four times
more likely than heterosexual women to have sex with men who were high-
Bacterial vaginosis, Hepatitis B, Hepatitis C, heavy cigarette smoking, alcohol abuse, intravenous drug use, and prostitution were present in much higher proportions among female homosexual practitioners.68 Intravenous drug abuse was nearly six times as common in this group.69In one study of women who had sex only with women in the prior 12 months, 30 percent had bacterial vaginosis.70 Bacterial vaginosis is associated with higher risk for pelvic inflammatory disease and other sexually transmitted infections.71
In view of the record of lesbians having sex with many men, including gay men, and the increased incidence of intravenous drug use among lesbians, lesbians are not low risk for disease. Although researchers have only recently begun studying the transmission of STDs among lesbians, diseases such as "crabs," genital warts, chlamydia and herpes have been reported.72 Even women who have never had sex with men have been found to have HPV, trichomoniasis and anogenital warts.73
C. Mental Health
1. Psychiatric Illness
Multiple studies have identified high rates of psychiatric illness, including depression,
drug abuse and suicide attempts, among selfprofessed gays and lesbians.74 Some proponents
of GLB rights have used these findings to conclude that mental illness is induced
by other people's unwillingness to accept same-
An extensive study in the Netherlands undermines the assumption that homophobia is
the cause of increased psychiatric illness among gays and lesbians. The Dutch have
been considerably more accepting of same-
The Dutch study, published in the Archives of General Psychiatry, did indeed find
a high rate of psychiatric disease associated with same-
The Dutch researchers concluded, "this study offers evidence that homosexuality is associated with a higher prevalence of psychiatric disorders. The outcomes are in line with findings from earlier studies in which less rigorous designs have been employed."81 The researchers offered no opinion as to whether homosexual behavior causes psychiatric disorders, or whether it is the result of psychiatric disorders.
2. Reckless Sexual Behavior
Depression and drug abuse can lead to reckless sexual behavior, even among those who are most likely to understand the deadly risks. In an article that was part of a series on "AIDS at 20," the New York Times reported the risks that many gay men take. One night when a gay HIV prevention educator named Seth Watkins got depressed, he met an attractive stranger, had anal intercourse without a condom — and became HIV positive. In spite of his job training, the HIV educator nevertheless employed the psychological defense of "denial" in explaining his own sexual behavior:
"[L]ike an increasing number of gay men in San Francisco and elsewhere, Mr. Watkins sometimes still puts himself and possibly other people at risk. 'I don't like to think about it because I don't want to give anyone H.I.V.,' Mr. Watkins said."82
Another gay man named Vince, who had never before had anal intercourse without a condom, went to a sex club on the spur of the moment when he got depressed, and had unprotected sex:
"I was definitely in a period of depression . . . . And there was just something about that particular circumstance and that particular person. I don't know how to describe it. It just appealed to me; it made it seem like it was all right."83
Some of the men interviewed by the New York Times are deliberately reckless. One fatalistic gay man with HIV makes no apology for putting other men at risk:
"The prospect of going through the rest of your life having to cover yourself up every time you want to get intimate with someone is an awful one. . . . Now I've got H.I.V. and I don't have to worry about getting it," he said. "There is a part of me that's relieved. I was tired of always having to be careful, of this constant diligence that has to be paid to intimacy when intimacy should be spontaneous."84
After admitting to almost never using condoms he adds:
"There is no such thing as safe sex. . . . If people want to use condoms, they can. I didn't go out and purposely get H.I.V. Accidents happen."85
Other reports show similar disregard for the safety of self and others. A1998 study
in Seattle found that 10 percent of HIV-
In addition, drug use at circuit parties is ubiquitous. Although only 57 percent admit going to circuit parties to use drugs, 95 percent of the survey participants said they used psychoactive drugs at the most recent event they attended.90 There was a direct correlation between the number of drugs used during a circuit party weekend and the likelihood of unprotected anal sex.91 The researchers concluded that in view of their findings, "the likelihood of transmission of HIV and other Sexually Transmitted Diseases among party attendees and secondary partners becomes a real public health concern."92
Good mental health would dictate foregoing circuit parties and other risky sex. But
neither education nor adequate access to health care is a deterrent to such reckless
behavior. "Research at the University of New South Wales found well-
D. Shortened Life Span
The greater incidence of physical and mental health problems among gays and lesbians has serious consequences for length of life. While many are aware of the death toll from AIDS, there has been little public attention given to the magnitude of the lost years of life.
An epidemiological study from Vancouver, Canada of data tabulated between 1987 and
1992 for AIDS-
The impact on length of life may be even greater than reported in the Canadian study.
First, HIV/AIDS is underreported by as much as 15-
E. "Monogamy"
Monogamy for heterosexual couples means at a minimum sexual fidelity. The most extensive
survey of sex in America found that "a vast majority [of heterosexual married couples]
are faithful while the marriage is intact."99 The survey further found that 94 percent
of married people and 75 percent of cohabiting people had only one partner in the
prior year.100 In contrast, long-
"After a period of optimism about the longrange potential of gay men's one-
Gay men's sexual practices appear to be consistent with the concept of "monogamy
without fidelity." Astudy of gay men attending circuit parties showed that 46 percent
were coupled, that is, they claimed to have a "primary partner." Twenty-
II Cultural Implications of Promiscuity
"Don't tear down a fence until you know why it was put up." ~ African proverb
The societal implications of the unrestrained sexual activity described above are
devastating. The ideal of sexual activity being limited to marriage, always defined
as male-
But now social activists are saying that there should be no fence, and that to destroy the fence is an act of liberation.107 If the fence is torn down, there is no visible boundary to sexual expression. If gay sex is socially acceptable, what logical reason can there be to deny social acceptance of adultery, polygamy, or pedophilia? The polygamist movement already has support from some of the advocates for GLB rights.108 And some in the psychological profession are floating the idea that maybe pedophilia is not so damaging to children after all.109
Lesbian social critic Camille Paglia observes, "history shows that male homosexuality, which like prostitution flourishes with urbanization and soon becomes predictably ritualized, always tends toward decadence."110 Gay author Gabriel Rotello writes of the changes in homosexual behavior in the last century:
"Most accounts of male-
Not only has the practice of anal sex increased, condom use has declined 20 percent
and multi-
Social approval of gay sex leads to an increase in such behavior. As early as 1993, Newsweek reported that the growing media presence and social acceptance of homosexual behavior was leading to teenager experimentation to the extent that it was "becoming chic."115 A more recent report stated that "the way gays and lesbians appear in the media may make some people more comfortable acting on homosexual impulses."116 In addition, one of the goals of GLB advocates' quest for domestic partner benefits from employers is to motivate more gays and lesbians "to come out of the closet."117 If, as suggested above, being "out" results in a greater incidence of promiscuity, employer decisions to provide domestic partner benefits may have a negative impact on employee health. Indeed, giving gays and lesbians the social approval they desire may ultimately lead to an early death for employees who otherwise might have restrained their sexual behavior.
Research designed to prove that gays and lesbians are "born that way" has come up empty — there is no scientific evidence that being gay or lesbian is genetically determined.118 Even researcher Dean Hamer, who once hoped he had identified a "gay gene," admits "there is a lot more than just genes going on."119
Conclusion
It is clear that there are serious medical consequences to same-
Appendix A
Definitional Impediments to Research
Unfortunately, endeavors to assess the actual practices and the health consequences of male and female homosexual behavior are hampered by imprecise definitions. For many, being gay or lesbian or bisexual is a political identity that does not necessarily correspond to sexual behavior. And investigators find that sexual behavior fluctuates over time:
"[P]eople often change their sexual behavior during their lifetimes, making it impossible to state that a particular set of behaviors defines a person as gay. A man who has sex with men today, for example, might not have done so 10 years ago."120
Defining the terms becomes even more difficult when people who identify as gay or
lesbian enter heterosexual relationships. Joanne Loulan, a well-
Several high-
As recently as June 2000, pop-
Although women get most of the press coverage of fluctuating between same-
"Does a man who has homosexual sex in prison count as a homosexual? Does a man who left his wife of twenty years for a gay lover count as a homosexual or heterosexual? Do you count the number of years he spent with his wife as compared to his lover? Does the married woman who had sex with her college roommate a decade ago count? Do you assume that one homosexual experience defines someone as gay for all time?"128
Despite the difficulty in defining homosexuality, the one thing that is clear is
that those who engage in same-
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The federal spending for AIDS research in 2001 was $2,247,000,000, while the spending for cancer research was not even double that at $4,376,400,000. "Funding For Research Areas of Interest," National Institute of Health, 2002, www4.od.nih.gov/officeofbudget/ FundingResearchAreas.htm.
Ibid.; "Fast Stats Ato Z: Diabetes," CDC — National Center for Health Statistics, June 04, 2002, www.cdc.gov/nchs/ fastats/diabetes.htm; "Fast Stats A to Z: Heart Disease," CDC — National Center for Health Statistics, June 06, 2002, www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/heart.htm.
Gay and Lesbian Medical Association Press Release, "Ten Things Lesbians Should Discuss with Their Health Care Providers" (July 17, 2002), www.glma.org/news/ releases/n02071710lesbianthings.html. The list includes Breast Cancer, Depression/Anxiety, Gynecological Cancer, Fitness, Substance Use, Tobacco, Alcohol, Domestic Violence, Osteoporosis and Heart Health.
Michael, et al., p. 176 ("about 1.4 percent of women said they thought of themselves as homosexual or bisexual and about 2.8% of the men identified themselves in this way").
See Appendix A.
Skinner, et al., Abstract; Ferris, et al. p. 581; James Price, et al., p. 90; see Appendix A.
Katherine Fethers, et al., "Sexually transmitted infections and risk behaviours in
women who have sex with women," Sexually Transmitted Infections, 76(5): 345-
Ibid., p. 347.
Ibid.
Ibid.
Ibid., p. 348.
Ibid., p. 347, Table 1; Susan D. Cochran, et al., "Cancer-
Fethers, et al., p. 347 and Table 1.
Barbara Berger, Shelley Kolton, et al., "Bacterial vaginosis in lesbians: a sexually
transmitted disease," Clinical Infectious Diseases, 21: 1402-
E. H. Koumans, et al., "Preventing adverse sequelae of Bacterial Vaginosis: a Public
Health Program and Research Agenda," Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 28(5): 292-
Kathleen M. Morrow, Ph.D., et al., "Sexual Risk in Lesbians and Bisexual Women,"
Journal of the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association, 4(4): 159-
Ibid., p. 159.
For example, Judith Bradford, Caitlin Ryan, and Esther D. Rothblum, "National Lesbian
Health Care Survey: Implications for Mental Health Care," Journal of Consulting and
Clinical Psychology, 62(2): 228-
Katherine A. O'Hanlan, M.D., et al., "Homophobia As a Health Hazard," Report of the
Gay & Lesbian Medical Association, pp. 3, 5, www.ohanlan.com/phobiahzd.htm; Laura
Dean, et al., "Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Health: Findings & Concerns,"
Journal of the Gay & Lesbian Medical Association, 4(3): 102-
"Netherlands Ends Discrimination in Civil Marriage: Gays to Wed," Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund Press Release, March 30, 2001, http://lambdalegal.org/cgibin/ pages/documents/record?record=814.
Theo Sandfort, Ron de Graaf, et al., "Same-
Ibid.
Ibid., p. 89.
Ibid., p. 90 (emphasis added).
Ibid.
Erica Goode, "With Fears Fading, More Gays Spurn Old Preventive Message," New York Times, August 19, 2001.
Ibid.
Ibid.
Ibid.
"Officials Voice Alarm Over Halt in AIDS Decline," New York Times, August 14, 2001.
"A uniform definition of a circuit party does not exist, partly because such parties
continue to evolve. However, a circuit party tends to be a multi-
Ibid., p. 955.
Ibid., p. 956.
Ibid., pp. 956-
Ibid., pp. 956-
Ibid., p. 957. The authors' recommendation was more education.
Julie Robotham, "Safe sex by arrangement as gay men reject condoms," Sydney Morning Herald, June 7, 2001. Data source: 2000 Male Out Survey, National Centre in HIV Social Research, Australia.
R. S. Hogg, S. A. Strathdee, et al., "Modeling the Impact of HIV Disease on Mortality
in Gay and Bisexual Men," International Journal of Epidemiology, 26(3): 657-
Press Release, Smoking costs nation $150 billion each year in health costs, lost productivity, CDC, Office of Communication, April 12, 2002, www.cdc.gov/od/oc/media/ pressrel/r020412.htm.
Hogg, et al., p. 660.
Ibid.
"Hepatitis A vaccination of men who have sex with men — Atlanta, Georgia, 1996-
Robert T. Michael, et al., p. 89.
Ibid., p. 101.
Camille Paglia, "I'll take religion over gay culture," Salon.com online magazine, June 1998, www.frontpagemag.com/archives/guest_column/ paglia/gayculture.htm.
Gordon Mansergh, Grant Colfax, et al., p. 955.
Joseph Harry, Gay Couples, p. 116, New York: Praeger Books, 1984.
Marcel T. Saghir, M.D. and Eli Robins, M.D., Male and Female Homosexuality: A Comprehensive Investigation, p. 57 Table 4.13, p. 225 Table 12.10, Baltimore: The Williams & Wilkins Company, 1973.
The existence of limited homosexual relationships in primitive cultures, or even
extensive homosexuality in declining civilizations, such as those cited by advocates
of same-
Joseph D. Unwin, "Sexual Regulations and Cultural Behaviour," pp. 18-
For example, see the website of the National Coalition for Sexual Freedom, Inc., www.ncsfreedom.org.
"The ACLU believes that criminal and civil laws prohibiting or penalizing the practice of plural marriage violate constitutional protections . . . ." 1992 Policy Guide of the ACLU, Policy #91, p. 175.
Judith Levine, Harmful to Minors: The Perils of Protecting Children from Sex, Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Press, 2002; Bruce Rind, Philip Tromovitch, and Robert Bauserman,
"A Meta-
Paglia, June 23, 1998.
Rotello, p. 42.
Goode, August 19, 2001.
Ibid.
See Michael Hamrick, The Hidden Costs of Domestic Partner Benefits, pp. 3-
David Gelman, et al., "Tune In, Come Out," Newsweek, p. 70, November 8, 1993.
"Iowa study suggests tolerance of homosexuals is growing," Associated Press, March 23, 2001.
Sally Kohn, The Domestic Partnership Organizing Manual for Employee Benefits, p.
1, the Policy Institute of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, www.ngltf.org/
downloads/dp-
John Horgan, "Gay Genes, Revisited," Scientific American, p. 26, November 1995.
Matthew Brelis, "The Fading 'Gay Gene,'" The Boston Globe, March 20, 2002, p. C1.
Michael, et al., p. 172.
Lynn Scherr, "Lesbian Leader Loves a Man," ABCNews.com, April 17, 1998.
"Former Lesbian Anne Heche Engaged to Cameraman," ABCNews.com, June 1, 2001 (emphasis added), reprinted at www.gaywired.com/index.cfm?linkPage=/storydetail.cf m&Section=68&ID=5304.
"The Facts: Anne Heche," Eonline.msn, April 1, 2002, www.eonline.com/Facts/People/Bio/0,128,31319,00.html.
"Sinead O'Connor to Marry a Man," Reuters, June 27, 2000, www.q.co.za/2001.2001.06.27-
"Sinead Drops out of Wotapalava Tour," JAM! Music, May 31, 2001, www.canoe.ca/JamMusicArtistsO/oconnor_ sinead.html.
John Stoltenberg, "Living with Andrea Dworkin," Lambda Book Report, May/June 1994, reprinted at www.nostatusquo.com/ACLU/dworkin/LivingWithAnd rea.html.
Julie Robotham, "Safe sex by arrangement as gay men reject condoms," The Sydney Morning Herald, June 7, 2001. Data source: "2000 Male Out Survey," National Centre in HIV Social Research, Australia.
Michael, et al., p. 172.
Edward O. Laumann, John H. Gagnon, et al., The social organization of sexuality:
Sexual practices in the United States, p. 293, Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
1994; Michael, et al., p. 176; David Forman and Clair Chilvers, "Sexual Behavior
of Young and Middle-
For additional information about how corporate policies can improve employees' health
as well as their work-
Acknowledgement
Dr. John R. Diggs, Jr., "The Health Risks of Gay Sex." Corporate Resource Council (2002).
The Author
Dr. John R. Diggs, Jr. is a practicing Internist with first-
Copyright © 2002 Corporate Resource Council.

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