This female sex patch doesn't sound too impressive to me.
Clinical trials showed that women using Intrinsa had modest improvements to their sex lives. Women who applied the patch to their abdomen twice weekly had one more "satisfying sexual event" per four weeks, compared with a placebo.President Bush needs to implement a No Woman Left Behind program that ends this soft bigotry of low expectations.









It's funny how everyone seems to think that female sexual response is primarily physical in nature just like male sexual response-- that women should of course be just like men. Hence the "need" for a patch like this. While there are women who have physiological reasons for low sex drive, most women with low sex drive (IMO) have psychological or spiritual problems that are impeding their ability to enjoy sex. No medical treatment can fix problems like that; even anti-depressants will eventually fail.
I don't think its a "psychological" or "spiritual" issue. Thats just the nature of the beast, that is by nature women have low sex drive than men in general. However, intrinsa is a whole different story. Its not intended for women with lack of sexual desire as a result of medical or surgical menopause.