An investigation by India's Kadave Institute of Medical Sciences measured the time a woman takes to reach orgasm during a relationship with intercourse. The study, which included 645 heterosexual women from 21 countries, married or in long-term relationships, determined that a woman's average time is 13 minutes and 25 seconds.
The study indicates that they were asked to measure from the moment they were aroused until they achieved orgasm. The study was done with a touch-sensitive chronometer. The data revealed that about one in six of those who participated said they never reached their climax during intercourse. Of the rest, women's time to reach orgasm was as low as 5 minutes 42 seconds to just over 21 minutes.
In addition, the women revealed that nine out of ten of those who participated in the investigation reported longer lasting sensations when they were at the top.
The scientists conducted the study between October 2017 and last September and believe they are the first to measure "orgasmic latency," the gap between arousal and climax.
The average age was 30 years, but when writing in the Journal of Sexual Medicine, the team at the Kadave Institute of Medical Sciences in India said the age of the women and how long they had been with their partners.
They defined the moment of excitement as' an intense desire to have sex in the presence of erotic stimuli, provided by the couple, or both methods and methods, and concluded that the average time to reach orgasm was 13 minutes and 25 seconds.
However, the study does not mention a crucial fact: according to a 2009 investigation, the average time for men to reach orgasm is only six minutes.
Other research
Last year, another study found that they were also far from their orgasm evaluations, with 43 percent making a mistake. That research, which involved 1,683 newly married couples, found that 87 percent of the spouses experienced orgasm, but only 49 percent of the women did.