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Men's and women's attitudes and beliefs about the menstrual cycle

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Abstract

Recent analyses of menstrual distress have emphasized sociocultural influences. Yet beliefs and attitudes of men—an important socialization force in the lives of women—have received little attention. In the present study, 239 students (156 females and 83 males) from three colleges filled out a survey on expectations for menstrual and premenstrual symptoms, attitudes about mensturation, sources of menstrual-related information, and effects of menstruation upon daily activities. The major findings are as follows: First, although both males and females believed women experience certain cycle-related symptoms, females reported that women experience more severe menstrual and premenstrual symptoms (when compared to intermenstrual ones) than males reported, while males believed women experience more severe menstrual than premenstrual symptoms than females believed. Second, males learned less about menstruation from the majority of possible informational sources and rated most sources as more negative than did the females. Third, males believed that menstruation had more of an effect on women's moods and had a more debilitating effect on women's lives than did females. Fourth, females rated menstruation as more bothersome than did males. Fifth, more males believed their mothers experienced menstrual irritability and moodiness, while more females believed their mothers experienced swelling. The findings are discussed in terms of the role of socialization and the type of information imparted to males and females in America today.

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The research reported in this paper was supported in part by grants from the National Science Foundation (SOC-02137 and SOC-02179). We wish to thank Linda Worcel for her help in data collection, Al Rogers and James Rosso for their help in data analysis, and Debra Friedman and Rosemary Deibler for their help in manuscript preparation.

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Brooks-Gunn, J., Ruble, D.N. Men's and women's attitudes and beliefs about the menstrual cycle. Sex Roles 14, 287–299 (1986). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00287580

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00287580

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