After the tremendous success of Viagra, J&J offers a new "wonder" drug.
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Thatâs the question Johnson & Johnson, Pfizer, and several biotech companies are asking. After the tremendous success of erectile dysfunction drugs such as Viagra, they are investigating treatments that now promise to delay ejaculation. In six months, Johnson & Johnson will be introducing âDapoxetine,â a drug currently under review by the Food and Drug Administration, and likely to be the first treatment approved for the condition. First, letâs define the term premature ejaculation, âdrug company style.â Providing stopwatches to wives and girlfriends, J & J asked them to measure the period between penetration and ejaculation of 1587 men. Anyone already feeling anxious? (a primary cause of premature ejaculation.) Those considering themselves ânormalâ averaged 7.3 minutes. Men who considered themselves âprematureâ averaged 1.8 minutes. But apparently quite a few of these self-defined premature men didnât leave feeling anxious about being premature. They didnât see it âa problem.â J & J hopes to change all that. When Seconds Count Undeterred, by the unfettered, J & J went forward, this time studying 2,614 men ages 18-77 in stable heterosexual relationships, all diagnosed with premature ejaculation (meaning not only that they did ejaculate in under two minutes, but they also felt anxious about it.) Two groups were given Dapoxetine at varying doses, one group was given placebo. The results were dose dependent: At 60-milligrams, they were able to last just over 3 minutes (up from an average 55 seconds), but 20% experienced nausea at that level, and another 6-7% had headaches, diarrhea or dizziness. At 30-milligrams, they delayed ejaculation 2.8 minutes, but with fewer side effects. The placebo group, who believed they were getting the drug but were not, lasted 1.8 minutes. Of course doctors have been prescribing a number of existing drugs already, for the condition, including the SSRIâs Paxil and Zoloft, shown to delay orgasm and Dapoxetine works in a similar manner. Like SSRI antidepressants, Dapoxetine regulates levels of serotonin in the brain, but it works much faster and can be taken 1-3 hours before sex. While SSRIâs are known to dampen libido, researchers hope this side effect will be less pronounced with Dapoxetine. (!!) Researchers are also exploring whether Viagra itself can alleviate premature ejaculation. Peddling âPrematurityâ No one can blame drug manufacturers for being lured into a market that brought Pfizer over $1 billion in sales from Viagra within a year. According to many estimates, this âconditionâ affects 15% to 30% of American men. Thatâs significantly more than the 10% with erectile problems. Estimates put the sales of Dapoxetine at $350 million to $1.15 billion in 2008. If they can convince even more men who are âprematureâ that it is a real problem, their profits could even be greater. Fantasy Model of Sex: âThe Hard Driving F**kâ Keeping the focus on the length of time a man can âlastâ with intercourse (along with the firmness and size of his penis) appears to be the âgold standardâ for those wanting to use sexual science to sell product. As the late Bernie Zilbergeld wrote in The New Male Sexuality, the penis is âSix feet long, hard as steel, and can go all nightâ in the Fantasy Model of Sex. Great for pornography and other fantasy, but what about real relationships? If Viagra is any guide, a pill and an erection does not âa great sex lifeâ make. Donât get me wrong, Viagra was welcomed by couples in good relationships, who were once again able to enjoy sexual intercourse with the help of a penis. But the troubled relationships did not find nirvana. There is always a man at the end of that penis, and having an erection, even one that lasts for hours, canât make up for years of bitterness, disrespect, and contempt two people live with. And lasting 60 or 70 seconds longer isnât likely to impress an alienated spouse, either. The Man at the End of the Penis Sex, in the final analysis, is about more than bumping bodies. Wouldnât it be great if the workings of a relatively small organ between a manâs legs, meeting some standard of ânormalâ enabled its owner to relate to other people, improve their sense of agency and effectiveness in the world, enhance their self-worth and overall feelings of masculinity? Penis enlargements didnât do it. Viagra didnât do it. I doubt Dapoxetine will have much effect either. There is no such thing as a powerful penis with a man attached. If the man isnât powerful, personally, and interpersonally, it hardly matters what his penis is doing. Eroticism involves the whole self, or it just doesnât work long-term. The Viagra Experience If the experience of Viagra has taught us anything, it is that pills can provide the erection, but the rest is up to the humans involved. Being able to have an erection, or last longer doesnât make someone a âreal man,â or a âhot lover.â It makes you a person with an erection or someone that ejaculates after 2.8 minutes, instead of 55 seconds. Pills also open up their own set of relationship and social issues. Who controls when they get used and why? âDid you take a Viagra or is that a ârealâ erection?â may soon be followed by âThat was only 82 seconds. Did you take the Dapoxetine or what?â Will women start grabbing their own stopwatches to see if they also can âspeed up their orgasmâ to match the three minute window? If we are able to extend intercourse indefinitely with the right dose, how long is âlong enough?â Women who can orgasm with intercourse usually take longer than 7.3 minutes. Should the âlong enough standardâ be based on the partner? Should insurance companies pay for it, and whose word do we take that the patient is lasting âunder the minimum timeâ? Like Viagra, Dapoxetine may be the courage some men need to find their way out of a bad marriage, or into extramarital affairs. It may also become popular for the young party crowd, who, exhausted and depleted, at the end of a long recreational-drug filled the evening have found Viagra a âquick pick-me-up,â literally. Short, but Sweet. And what about those guys who lasted less than two minutes, but were quite happy to keep it that way? Are they selfish ogres, or have they learned something about making sex passionate and intense before penetration (and after their partnerâs orgasm)? Did their partners tell researches that âby the time we were ready for intercourse, I am content and sexually satisfied.â Would they describe their two minute intercourse as a âpleasant way of ending the lovemakingâ? No, I doubt the researchers even asked any questions of them. There is no money to be made from researching sexually-contented people, because there is little to sell them. Except discontent. It will be interesting to watch how J & J instigates sexual anxiety in guys and their partners where none previously existed. It will all be carefully researched beforehand. And somehow a manâs willingness to risk headaches, nausea, low sex drive and dizziness to last âa silly 60-seconds longerâ will seem like a reasonable âloving choice.â More âcost effectiveâ than sex therapy, another treatment option that most often holds a 70-80% treatment success. Taking a pill just seems easier than having a candid discussion about oneâs sexual preferences and options. But it is illusionary. The âright tool for the right jobâ is only a useful metaphor if sex can be reduced to âperformanceâ and the penis becomes the most important instrument for the âjob.â A man will always be behind the penis, and while pills canât talk, he can and should, if a more satisfying sexual relationship is what heâs after. |