Restoring Intimacy: Navigating Sexual Dysfunction in Schizophrenia and Your Treatment Options

This is not a personal failing, emphasizes Alex Dimitriu, MD, psychiatrist and founder of Menlo Park Psychiatry and Sleep Medicine in California and medical reviewer for Everyday Health.
“The disease itself likely has impacts on sexual function, and medication for schizophrenia can also play a significant role,” he says. “For example, treatment may include strong dopamine blockers that can inhibit sex drive.”
This can be a challenging issue to talk about, both with your partner and with your doctor, but it isn’t something you just have to live with. Here’s a look at how schizophrenia and its treatment can impact your sexual health and management strategies that may help.
Antipsychotics and Intimacy
- No interest in sex
- Difficulty becoming aroused
- Lubrication issues in women
- Erectile dysfunction in men
- Trouble achieving orgasm
While sexual dysfunction happens for many different reasons, it’s a known side effect of several types of medications. That includes antipsychotic drugs, which are often used to manage schizophrenia, explains Suraj Modi, MD, psychiatrist at Orlando Health Medical Group Behavioral Health in Florida.
“This ripple effect of lower dopamine, increased prolactin, and lower GnRH can significantly affect sexual function,” Modi says. “Stronger dopamine blockers like risperidone are more likely to cause this, while other medications like quetiapine or aripiprazole are less likely.”
Effects of Sexual Dysfunction
Management Strategies
It’s important not to stop taking your medication or change the dose without talking to your doctor. While many people who take antipsychotics are reluctant to bring up sexual side effects with their healthcare provider, it’s crucial for getting help.
“Communicate freely and openly with your provider so they can address your concerns,” Modi says. “Sometimes it may warrant a dose reduction or medication change. Sometimes other medication classes can offset these unwanted side effects if symptoms of psychosis and functioning have been well managed.”
For example, antipsychotic medications like aripiprazole (Abilify), quetiapine (Seroquel), and olanzapine (Zyprexa) tend to have lower sexual side effects, says Dr. Dimitriu. There are also medications like sildenafil citrate (Viagra) or tadalafil (Cialis), which can be helpful for specific issues like erectile dysfunction.
Another important step is to implement meaningful lifestyle habits, Dimitriu adds. “Exercise, sufficient sleep, and a nutritious diet help a great deal,” he says. “Your brain lives in your body, so do everything you can to boost your physical health. Exercise directly improves circulation, sleep restores neurotransmitters, and diet is the fuel to make it all happen. These can all play a role in restoring sexual function and intimacy.”
The Takeaway
- Sexual dysfunction is common in those with schizophrenia, but it can be a difficult issue to talk about.
- In many cases, sexual issues may be related to the use of antipsychotics, which are often prescribed to help manage schizophrenia symptoms.
- Talking with your doctor and taking charge of your health overall can go a long way toward helping to alleviate sexual health and intimacy challenges.
Resources We Trust
- Mayo Clinic: Schizophrenia
- Cleveland Clinic: Schizophrenia
- JAMA Psychiatry: Sexual Dysfunction in Schizophrenia
- Schizophrenia Bulletin: The Facts About Sexual (Dys)function in Schizophrenia: An Overview of Clinically Relevant Findings
- Expert Review of Neurotherapeutics: Managing Antipsychotic-Related Sexual Dysfunction in Patients With Schizophrenia
- Korchia T et al. Sexual Dysfunction in Schizophrenia: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. JAMA Psychiatry. November 2023.
- Sexual Dysfunction. Cleveland Clinic. May 29, 2024.
- Dopamine. Cleveland Clinic. March 23, 2022.
- Al-Chalabi M et al. Physiology, Prolactin. StatPearls. July 24, 2023.
- Crawford MJ et al. Switching Antipsychotic Medication to Reduce Sexual Dysfunction in People With Psychosis: The REMEDY RCT. Health Technology Assessment. September 2020.
- Schizophrenia. Mayo Clinic. October 16, 2024.
- Read J. The Experiences of 585 People When They Tried to Withdraw From Antipsychotic Drugs. Addictive Behaviors Reports. June 2022.

Angela D. Harper, MD
Medical Reviewer
Angela D. Harper, MD, is in private practice at Columbia Psychiatric Associates in South Carolina, where she provides evaluations, medication management, and psychotherapy for adults.
A distinguished fellow of the American Psychiatric Association, Dr. Harper has worked as a psychiatrist throughout her career, serving a large number of patients in various settings, including a psychiatric hospital on the inpatient psychiatric and addiction units, a community mental health center, and a 350-bed nursing home and rehab facility. She has provided legal case consultation for a number of attorneys.
Harper graduated magna cum laude from Furman University with a bachelor's degree and cum laude from the University of South Carolina School of Medicine, where she also completed her residency in adult psychiatry. During residency, she won numerous awards, including the Laughlin Fellowship from the American College of Psychiatrists, the Ginsberg Fellowship from the American Association of Directors of Psychiatric Residency Training, and resident of the year and resident medical student teacher of the year. She was also the member-in-training trustee to the American Psychiatric Association board of trustees during her last two years of residency training.
Harper volunteered for a five-year term on her medical school's admission committee, has given numerous presentations, and has taught medical students and residents. She currently supervises a nurse practitioner. She is passionate about volunteering for the state medical board's medical disciplinary commission, on which she has served since 2015.
She and her husband are avid travelers and have been to over 55 countries and territories.

Elizabeth Millard
Author
Elizabeth Millard is a Minnesota-based freelance health writer. Her work has appeared in national outlets and medical institutions including Time, Women‘s Health, Self, Runner‘s World, Prevention, and more. She is an ACE Certified Personal Trainer and a Yoga Alliance Registered Yoga Teacher, and is trained in obesity management.