(Re)discovering Sexual Pleasure after Cancer

Understanding the Design Space

Conference Paper (2025)
Author(s)

C.E. Offerman (TU Delft - Internet of Things)

Jacky Bourgeois (TU Delft - Internet of Things)

Jules van Beurden (Independent researcher)

A. Bozzon (TU Delft - Human-Centred Artificial Intelligence)

Internet of Things
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1145/3706598.3713535
More Info
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Publication Year
2025
Language
English
Internet of Things
ISBN (electronic)
979-8-4007-1394-1
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Abstract

Cancer treatments often lead to sexual health challenges that greatly impact cancer survivors’ quality of life. Current interventions primarily address physiological aspects, like medication or vaginal care, overlooking psychological, social, and cultural dimensions. This paper explores how HCI can address this gap by supporting post-cancer sexual health with interventions for survivors and their partners, considering their lived experiences. Through reflexive thematic analysis of interviews with (N=6) medical sexologists, we identified five themes: perceiving the body as a medical object, the hot potato problem in oncology, sociotechnical sexploration, reuniting what treatment has divided, and designing interventions with openness in a highly situated context. These themes highlight cancer survivors’ experiences, the (in)effectiveness of current interventions, and provision of care. This research outlines the design space for post-cancer sexual health by providing specific design directions (“what”) and ways for designing them (“how”), while advancing the broader discourse on intimacy and design within HCI.