@article{7c9006d777414511baf06d1ec32da669,
title = "Sexual dysfunction or pain disorder? Dyspareunia from the perspective of the harmful dysfunction analysis",
author = "Wakefield, {Jerome C.}",
note = "Funding Information: 1This research is financially supported by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada through their Standard Grants programme. 2I should stress here that these women were quite aware that pain in such a sensitive and psychosocially significant part of the body can be connected to psychic distress, and many had sought psychological help to deal with some of the personal and relational issues surrounding vulvar pain. However, they did not believe that their pain condition was primarily psychological or primarily sexual in nature, indirectly complementing Binik and Meana{\textquoteright}s findings that the physiological manifestations of vulvar pain correspond more strongly to a pain condition taxonomy than a sexual dysfunction one.",
year = "2005",
month = feb,
doi = "10.1007/s10508-005-7479-1",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "34",
pages = "52--57",
journal = "Archives of Sexual Behavior",
issn = "0004-0002",
publisher = "Springer New York",
number = "1",
}