5 question tool for women to help your clinician determine the cause of your loss of interest in sex.
Audience: PATIENT
Published by ISSWSH
Revision 3 · Published February 4, 2026
Clayton, A. H., Goldfischer, E. R., Goldstein, I., Derogatis, L., Lewis-D’Agostino, D. J., & Pyke, R. (2009). Validation of the Decreased Sexual Desire Screener (DSDS): A brief diagnostic instrument for generalized acquired hypoactive sexual desire disorder in women. Journal of Sexual Medicine, 6(3), 730–738.
©2007 Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Purpose: The Decreased Sexual Desire Screener (DSDS) is a brief diagnostic tool designed for primary care physicians and therapists to screen women for generalized, acquired Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder (HSDD). It helps identify patients who may warrant further evaluation for HSDD based on their self-reported sexual desire history, current state, and potential contributing factors. It is intended to facilitate discussion and guide clinical assessment.
The criteria align with the definition of HSDD characterized in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th Edition, Text Revision (DSM-IV-TR). HSDD is defined as a deficiency or absence of sexual fantasies and desire for sexual activity, causing marked distress or interpersonal difficulty, not better explained by other medical, substance-related, psychiatric, or sexual conditions. HSDD can be generalized or situational, acquired or lifelong. This screener focuses specifically on generalized, acquired HSDD.
Clinical Workflow and Interpretation:
Questions 1-4 assess if the patient
Question 5 identifies potential contributing factors (medical conditions, medications, relationship issues, stress, etc.).
The interpretation logic is as follows:
Current: Revision 3
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