Quote:
The London clinic was among the first centers in Europe to offer fertility treatment to lesbians and single women. In a study of 618 women treated at the clinic, Agrawal discovered that 38 percent of the lesbian women had PCOS, compared to 14 percent of the heterosexual women.
The cause of PCOS is unknown but an excess of androgens, or male hormones, has been linked with PCOS. Other research studies have linked hyperandrogenism to sexual orientation.
I have been unable to find a study that corroborates these findings, but I shall keep looking just in case. In the meantime, there are quite a few question marks that can be placed beside these conclusions and suggestions. How many of those 618 were lesbians? It does not say in this article and I cannot find the study. Maybe it hasn't been published yet. I can't check how statistically significant these findings are, but 618 is a low number and no doubt the number of lesbians among those 618 much lower, so low that most likely it isn't enough to base such a conclusion on, just enough to warrant more study perhaps.
As for the excess of androgens talk. That is inaccurate. PCOS is a complicated syndrome of unknown origin, genetics seems to be a factor, but a definite cause hasn't been found so far. However, an excess of androgens is a *result* of PCOS not the *cause* of it. Therefore even if PCOS has a higher prevalence among lesbians this in no way supports the assumption that lesbians have higher androgen levels and with that the implication that maybe higher androgen levels *cause* lesbianism, because these raised levels are the result of a medical condition. To my knowledge there is no scientific proof that gays or lesbians are biologically 'different' from their straight counterparts, at least not when it comes to hormones. There are some studies that might be onto something (non hormonal, non environmental), but more research is needed before any conclusions can be drawn.
Of course a lot of research is being done, ranging from reasonably sensible to things like studying fingerlength. I have said it before, I would wish they'd spend all that time, energy and money trying to find the hormone or the part of the brain that causes homophobia. As it is that does not seem to be a priority. If they ever do find proof that homosexuality has a biological basis then that could demolish one of the favourite homophobic arguments that being gay is unnatural or a choice etc. It might help fight some of the homophobia out there.
Then again, some people will never ever get over their homophobia and might try to use knowledge like that to prevent gay people from being born (I have a feeling abortion would be less of an issue to people like that when the fetus is gay) or try to find another cure, genetherapy, hormone replacement, or whatever else you can think of. Sure it messes with the natural order of things, but well being gay is so horrible the powers that be will look away just this once.
Bleh, I'm still not quite sure what to think of research like this. What I am sure about is that you have to be pretty careful before jumping to conclusions.
My feeling says there is a biological basis for homosexuality and transsexuality. After all we all know by now that this isn't a choice and you can't be 'cured' by psychotherapy. We are who we are regardless of how we were raised. You can't make someone gay and you can't make them not gay. I just do not believe it has anything to do with hormones or lesbians being more masculine than straight women or gay men being more feminine than straight men. There is no evidence for that, just a lot of assumptions and guesswork.
I should add that I actually don't want to believe that biology or genetics are the only things that make us who we are. I do like to think that there is more to life than us being DNA that can think about itself.
-------------------------
Coffee, Food, Kisses and Gay Love........Get it while you are hot