Sexual health is one of the most neglected areas of mental healthcare in India — not because it isn't important, but because shame and misinformation make it nearly impossible to discuss openly. The result: people suffer silently with entirely treatable conditions, believing they are abnormal or broken. This article is written as medical education, with the same seriousness we'd bring to any other health topic.
Are Sexual Problems "Real" Medical Issues?
Sexual difficulties are extremely common. A landmark U.S. national survey found that sexual dysfunction affects an estimated 43% of women and 31% of men at some point — yet the majority never seek help.[1]
Does Erectile Dysfunction Only Happen to Older Men?
In younger men, ED is predominantly psychological — linked to performance anxiety, depression, relationship conflict, or pornography-related desensitisation. In older men, physical causes play a larger role, and there is now strong evidence that ED and cardiovascular disease share a common mechanism: impaired blood vessel function. A recent review found ED carries a significantly higher risk of coronary heart disease, cardiovascular mortality, and all-cause mortality, often appearing before any cardiac symptoms are noticed.[2]
In my practice, I've had more than one patient visibly relieved — not embarrassed — to learn that their ED was flagged to me as a possible early cardiac marker rather than purely "in their head." Treating it starts with understanding whether the roots are psychological, physical, or, most commonly, both.
Is Low Sexual Desire Always About the Relationship?
Common medical causes include:
- Depression, where low libido is a core symptom
- Antidepressant medications — SSRIs frequently reduce sexual desire, which is manageable and worth discussing with your doctor
- Hormonal changes — thyroid disorders, low testosterone, perimenopause
- Chronic illness, pain, and fatigue
- Relationship distress and unresolved conflict
- Past trauma or abuse
Understanding the cause determines the solution — relationship therapy, medication adjustment, hormonal treatment, or trauma-informed psychotherapy are all potential pathways.
Does Masturbation Cause Illness?
A number of alternative-medicine practitioners in South Asia continue to advertise "semen loss" and masturbation as causes of sexual dysfunction, despite this belief having no scientific basis and having largely disappeared from mainstream medicine elsewhere in the world.[3] The medical consensus is that masturbation is a normal sexual behaviour across the lifespan, becoming clinically significant only if it turns compulsive, causes real distress, or interferes with daily functioning.
Some of the most anxious young patients I see are not anxious because of masturbation itself, but because of years of believing a WhatsApp forward or an unqualified practitioner's warning about "semen loss." Correcting the misinformation itself is often the single most therapeutic thing I can offer in that first session.
Does Sexual Trauma Just "Go Away" If You Move On?
Sexual trauma — including childhood sexual abuse, sexual assault, or coercive experiences — can have profound and lasting effects on mental health, relationships, and sexual functioning, including PTSD, depression, anxiety, and difficulty with intimacy. "Just moving on" is not a treatment plan. Trauma-informed therapy, including EMDR and trauma-focused CBT, can facilitate genuine healing.
Can You Actually Discuss This With a Doctor?
A good psychiatrist or sexual health physician will not be shocked or judgmental about sexual health concerns — this is our area of expertise, and we have these conversations daily. What happens in your consultation is completely confidential.
When Should You Seek Help?
- Sexual difficulties are causing you distress or affecting your relationship
- You have concerns about sexual compulsivity or pornography use
- You have a history of sexual trauma you've never addressed
- Medication you are taking appears to be affecting your sexual function
- You have questions about sexual orientation or identity you'd like to discuss in a safe space
"Healing isn't linear — but it is possible. Always."
— Dr. Varun Gupta
Frequently Asked Questions
Can erectile dysfunction be a sign of heart disease?
Yes. Erectile dysfunction and cardiovascular disease share the same underlying mechanism of blood vessel dysfunction, and ED frequently appears years before a diagnosed heart problem. It is considered an early warning sign worth medical evaluation.
Does masturbation cause physical or mental illness?
No. Masturbation is considered a normal, healthy sexual behaviour by every major medical body. It becomes a concern only if it becomes compulsive, causes significant distress, or interferes with daily functioning or relationships.
Is low sexual desire always a sign of relationship problems?
No. Low libido is commonly linked to medical causes including depression, certain medications, hormonal changes, and chronic illness, in addition to relationship factors. A proper evaluation is needed to identify the actual cause.
References
- Laumann EO, Paik A, Rosen RC. Sexual dysfunction in the United States: prevalence and predictors. JAMA, via PubMed. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10022110
- Cortese F, et al. Can We Consider Erectile Dysfunction as an Early Marker of Cardiovascular Disease? PMC, National Library of Medicine. pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11198067
- Predatory Advertising and Lack of Sex Education for Sexual Difficulties in India. PMC, National Library of Medicine. pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11076930
Ready to take the first step?
Book a confidential consultation with Dr. Varun Gupta — MBBS, MD Psychiatry, Jammu.
300/1 Channi Himmat, Jammu
Shop No. 3, Near CHCH Katra, Counter No. 2