Are there gay down syndrome

Issues of sexuality in Down syndrome

Don Van Dyke, Dianne McBrien, and Andrea Sherbondy

As human beings, individuals with Down syndrome have the right to emotionally satisfying and culturally appropriate sexual verbalization. As patients, they have the right to routine reproductive health care provided to the general population. Cognitive and language disabilities may predispose this population to unwanted pregnancy, sexually transmitted disease, and sexual manipulation. Sex education tailored to cognitive level, learning style, and living arrangements is essential to the education of children and young adults with Down syndrome.

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Van Dyke, D, McBrien, D, and Sherbondy, A. (1995) Issues of sexuality in Down syndrome. Down Syndrome Research and Practice, 3(2), 65-69. doi:10.3104/reviews.53

Introduction

Issues of sexuality accompany each stage of human development. Sexual tasks for infants and pre-school aged children include the development of physical and emotional attachment to parents and other family members; issues for academy aged children are the emergence of modesty and privacy as well as the beginning of masturbation [Table 1] (Haka- Ikse and Mian, 1

HOME FREE REVIEW: Gay Man with Down’s Syndrome is Hailed as an ‘Icon’ as He Declares ‘I like men with beards’

Viewers praised a gay man with Down’s Syndrome after he opened up about his struggles with his sexuality on Channel 4’s Home Free last night.

Curtis, 27, from London, who has Down’s syndrome, appeared on the documentary, which followed a group of childish people with learning disabilities vanishing home for the first age and moving into supported living apartments.

But while his mother Dale said he was ‘definitely gay’ and became ‘very excited’ when he was around ‘large bearded men’, she also suggested he struggled to cope with female attention, and could often terminate up ‘confused’ about his feelings.

Viewers were quick to fall in love with Curtis, with one dubbing him a ‘gay icon’ online.

Viewers fell in love with Curtis, 27, from London after he admitted he was struggling to navigate his sexuality on Channel 4’s Home Free last night

One wrote: ‘Curtis on Abode Free is a gay diva. His pics for his tinder profile are class.’

Another commented:

LGBTQ People with Disabilities

*This section was created as a collaboration between GLAAD and RespectAbility

A Large Intersection
The LGBTQ people and the disability community intersect in significant ways. According to  research published in 2012, fully 36% of women in the LGBTQ community and 30% of men in the community also self-identify as people with disabilities. Twenty-six percent of lgbtq+ men and 40% of bisexual men disclosed having a disability, as did 36% of lesbians and 36% of bisexual women. Investigate from the Movement Advancement Project estimated that 3 to 5 million LGBTQ people live with one or more disabilities.

One in four lesbian, gay, and bisexual adults in the U.S. has a disability, and two in five transgender adults contain a disability.

Further explore done by UCLA via the California Health Interview Survey shows that gender non-conforming people “are significantly more likely to report having a disability due to a physical, mental or emotional condition.”

Just as LGBTQ status cuts across every demographic — gender, age, race, sexual orientation, etc. — so does disability. – Too often, people with disabilities are represented by straight, whit

'Drag Syndrome': Performers with Down syndrome find outlet for their creativity

It’s a Saturday night, and the crowd is buzzing in the small but gilded room of London’s most iconic gay venue, the Royal Vauxhall Tavern, a place where stars are born and guest lists are forbidden.

The stage, one that has played host to alternative cabaret since the 1960s, when homosexuality still meant a jail sentence in the U.K., is aglow with anticipation, everyone turned to its red velvet curtains, waiting for the evening’s drag perform to arrive.

Then, without warning, the steady electronic beat of the harmony shifts to a more familiar Divine track, and out pops a queenly queen dressed to the nines in a skin-tight catsuit, draped with purple sequins, and a blond wig to top it all off.

“Good evening bitches,” says the performer, Horrora Shebang, whip at the ready, as she launches into her three-part operate, which has the audience engulfed in applause by the time she reaches her risquéfinale.

It’s Horrora’s first appearance under this solemn spotlight, and, if anything is for certain, it’s that she’s a sure-fire hit.

“I don’t do nervous,” Otto Baxter, the dude behind the feisty Horrora Sheba