Monday, January 28, 2013

Penicillin, not the pill, may have launched the sexual revolution

Penicillin, not the pill, may have launched the sexual revolution: The rise in risky, non-traditional sexual relations that marked the swinging '60s and advent of readily available contraception actually began as much as a decade earlier, during the conformist '50s, suggests a new analysis. The analysis strongly indicates that the widespread use of penicillin, leading to a rapid decline in syphilis during the 1950s, is what launched the modern sexual era.

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