What does this pill for women even do? Like specifically? Were not men, we dont need to get hard, so what is this pill for, wetness? Is that all cause you can be wet and not be horny.
Does it do either of those or does it just make you less judgemental or guarded or incapacitated? If the latter is the case, then this drug is akin to a roofie and shouldnt hit the market. Until you answer what it does, im not sure how to answer this, but ill make an attempt.
Apparently the pill does make females horny
How many ladies would use this?
I'd imagine no more than the number of men on Viagra.
It comes in a pink pill form
How many feel they need it?
Menopausal women maybe, and probably not many others.
You'd be surprised how many females have low sexual drives
Could this be considered a passive date rape drug?
See the thrabove questions posed.
lol If I slip it in your drink and thru the evening you become horny. Is it because of your attraction to me or the pill? lol
Is this the end of foreplay?
What? If the pill makes you horny why wouldnt you still want foreplay? If all it does is make you wet, you probably need foreplay to make you horny. Is this a date rapey drug? If so, then i imagine foreplay isnt happening, but who can say for sure??
You wouldn't need the stimulus I guess.
Please explain your theoretical pill.
"
Flibanserin, by contrast, acts on the neurotransmitters in the brain that affect sexual desire. The drug targets the “feel-good” hormones of the brain, also known as dopamine and serotonin, in similar fashion to an antidepressant works. (In fact, flibanserin was initially developed and previously tested for use as an antidepressant, but failed in clinical trials.)
Sprout Pharmaceuticals, the company behind flibanserin, presented the results of its most recent study, saying the drug shows significant promise. In a series of double-blind clinical trials, flibanserin worked better than the placebo to improve women’s sexual desire by increasing the number of sexually satisfying events and lowering the amount of distress women experience as a result of their low libido.
The results showed that after 24 weeks, 46% to 60% of the women in the trials had benefited from taking flibanserin. Some committee members were skeptical, arguing that most of the purported benefit could be chalked up to the placebo effect and that the percentage of women who really benefited from the drug was probably more like 10%.
Viagra was approved by the FDA back in 1998. So why is there still not an approved analogue for women? There have been a number of attempts at a women’s Viagra, but the FDA has not approved any of them. The controversy seems to center on the fact that the FDA has described this condition that women suffer from as an “unmet medical need.” "
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