He’s heard men say their doctors “neutered” them. “Your doctor might tell you you’ll have an erection strong enough for intercourse, but anal penetration requires 33 percent more rigidity,” Rosser said. And he’s keenly aware of how little information is available for men like him. But he’s not just a researcher - he’s a survivor himself, diagnosed last year at age 59. University of MinnesotaĪ professor at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health, Rosser has received a $3 million grant from the National Cancer Institute to put together the first comprehensive rehabilitation program specifically for gay and bisexual men with prostate cancer. Simon Rosser, PhD, MPH, is a professor at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health. “The medical community say, ‘We don’t want to ask older heterosexual men questions that might upset them,’" Simon Rosser, an LGBTQ health specialist and co-author of " Gay and Bisexual Men Living With Prostate Cancer," told NBC News.
It’s impossible to know how many gay men have been diagnosed prostate cancer, because questions about sexuality are rarely included in research studies. “To go into a urologist office, you walk in with all this shame and inhibition,” Brass lamented. That discomfort can spread to gay patients. They can’t even breathe the words ‘anal sex.’ Talking to a man about it is just impossible.” "If you bring another man, they don’t know what to do. “If you’re gay and you go to a urologist who hasn’t dealt with gay men, they’ll tell you, ‘Bring your wife with you,’" he said. That would result in a firing and a public apology from the outlet, for damn good reason.That’s true in the doctor’s office, too, Brass added. Remember, though, this doesn’t take the bar’s bouncer into account, so things can get risky in a real-life situation. What if this study had concluded that attractive women suddenly find geeky-looking guys attractive after ten drinks, and a geek-culture website said the following? What other implication is to be drawn here? The article identifies absolutely no moral barrier to approaching an incapacitated straight man. Because hatred of gays - and not, you know, hatred of being raped - could result in you getting a beatdown. They actually seem to tell their readers that being a rapist could get you assaulted, so choose your victim wisely. Gaybuzzer (the article is attributed to “Gaybuzzer staff”) wants its readers to know that if they are going to take this “information” and consider initiating sexual activity with an incapacitated straight man, they should remember that could land them in prison for rape. Remember, though, that this doesn’t take homophobia into account - so things can get risky in a real-life situation. In fact, those guys who had more than ten drinks, were as interested (sexually) in the man, as they were with the woman. Then, they were shown a 40 second video clip of either an attractive woman or an attractive man sitting in a bar, and were asked to rate how willing they were to perform certain acts with the person in the video - from chatting to sex. The study was published on The Journal of Social Psychology, and later reported by Vice. In the study, straight men who had just been drinking were asked to fill a survey detailing how much they had to drink. And their article sure seems to imply that raping drunk straight men is just fine: The study was picked up by a gay website, though. The study itself - wherein the “researchers” approached 83 men who were out barhopping, and somehow got men who had claimed to have had ridiculous amounts of alcohol to not only understand what they were being asked, but to take it seriously - is nonsense, but that’s for another article on the downfall of the scientific community.
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But the degree to which some view an incapacitated man differently than a woman is on full display here.Ī recent study claims that seriously drunk men - as in “more than 10 drinks” drunk - report being suddenly interested in gay sex. Obviously, it can be a crime to initiate sexual activity with an incapacitated person, whatever the gender.