logo
Morning glory or night-time no show? What your erections (or lack of) reveal about your health

Morning glory or night-time no show? What your erections (or lack of) reveal about your health

The Sun06-08-2025
Plus, the treatments available if you're suffering with erectile dysfunction
HARD TRUTH Morning glory or night-time no show? What your erections (or lack of) reveal about your health
MOST men occasionally fail to get or keep an erection and it can be hard to tell whether this is due to a physical or psychological cause.
But there may be a way in which men can find out - by monitoring what happens down below at a certain time of the day.
Advertisement
3
While 'morning wood' might be a good sign, erectile dysfunction could indicate an underlying health problem
Credit: Getty
Men who keep an eye on their erections after waking up in the morning may be more attuned to what's going on with their health.
For example, Abbas Kanani, pharmacist at online pharmacy Chemist Click, said, if you've experienced erectile dysfunction, but continue to get morning wood, your body is likely to be healthy enough to produce erections.
He continued: "The problem isn't likely to be a physical one, but a psychological one."
Morning wood is an erection that men have as they wake up and is a good indicator of a healthy blood and nerve supply to your penis.
Advertisement
Abbas added: "It means that your body is physiologically capable of achieving an erection and that you probably aren't affected by physical ED, caused by high blood pressure, diabetes, or low testosterone."
While men aren't always going to wake up to a rock-hard erection, they should be getting them every so often, he urged.
Abbas added: There are no set guidelines or indicators which state how many days a week a man should be waking up with an erection, but if you're not waking up with the morning glory you once knew, it can be a sign that you have an underlying health condition."
Sexual arousal in men is a process which involves the brain, hormones, nerves, emotions, and blood vessels.
Advertisement
As such, erectile problems can arise when there's a problem with any of these processes.
"Problems can be both physical and psychological," said Abbas.
What is Erectile Dysfunction?
Erectile dysfunction (ED) is a very common condition.
It's estimated to affect half of all men between the ages of 40 and 70, according to NHS reports.
Advertisement
Physical ED can be due to:
Medical conditions such as high blood pressure, diabetes, kidney disease, stroke, epilepsy, obesity, Parkinson's or low testosterone levels.
Nerve damage
Smoking
Excess alcohol consumption
Anatomical problems with your penis such as Peyronie's or penile fracture
Certain medication
Psychogenic erectile dysfunction occurs when a man has the inability to achieve or maintain an erection during sex due to psychological factors. These can include the following...
Stress
3
Stress can affect arousal as well as testosterone levels
Credit: Getty
Stress can be linked to erection problems in men.
Advertisement
Abbas explained: "During times of stress, activity in the less essential sections of the brain, including the receptors responsible for managing arousal, start to decrease.
"When you are preoccupied, often with the pressures that life has to present, it's difficult to focus.
"It may even be the case that sex is the last thing on your mind which can affect performance".
He added: "Stress can also affect testosterone levels, and the quality of sleep, which can have a knock-on effect on sexual activity".
Advertisement
Performance anxiety
Sexual performance anxiety is generally believed to be amongst the most common psychological causes of ED.
The desire to please a new partner during sexual intercourse can cause performance anxiety in men of any age, said Abbas.
He continued: "Erection difficulties on occasion can also have a negative effect the next time you try, and this can have a negative impact on your confidence.
"In most cases, anxiety induced ED is temporary, but may require therapy."
Advertisement
Depression
3
Depression can also impact the body's ability to trigger sexual arousal
Credit: GETTY
Whether exacerbated by loss of self-esteem or over fatigue, a depressed mental state can significantly impact the body's ability to trigger sexual arousal.
Abbas said: "ED itself can exacerbate the symptoms of depression, and vice versa".
Loss of interest
A reduction in libido may be responsible for ED.
Advertisement
"Symptoms stemming from a lack of interest in sex may have as much to do with partner familiarity as they do a lack of testosterone, and relationship issues can trigger an onset of ED symptoms," cautioned Abbas.
"When it comes to the onset of ED, there are often underlying issues that require addressing prior to tackling any secondary aggravators.
"Once the primary source of the erection issue has been identified and addressed, it is possible to reverse and treat the condition permanently."
Advertisement
But in some primary cases – for example if a man has never been able to achieve or maintain a rigid erection – treating ED permanently is more of a challenge, depending on the cause.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Action demanded as North Shields dental surgery limits NHS care
Action demanded as North Shields dental surgery limits NHS care

BBC News

time42 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Action demanded as North Shields dental surgery limits NHS care

Concern over a dental surgery's decision to stop taking on NHS patients has prompted calls for a solution to be found "urgently".Verne Road Dental Practice in North Shields blamed financial and staffing strains for its move to limit NHS access to children, vulnerable adults and those in acute North East and North Cumbria Integrated Care Board (ICB) said it was working with the company, which had seen three dentists leave in the past two a letter to North Tyneside mayor Karen Clark, Conservative opposition leader Liam Bones said: "Given the urgency of the situation, I am calling on you to immediately convene the North Tyneside Dental Taskforce." Bones said the meeting "should bring together local dentists, NHS England representatives, public health officials, and councillors from all parties".The practice has informed patients it would use its "small NHS contract" to prioritise the selected group with everyone else invited to sign up for a private said it was facing challenges including "funding, increasing staff and material costs as well as recruitment difficulties" and was having to make "crucial decisions to ensure our practice survives". Reassuring dental patients Many patients had expressed their confusion and concerns online, the Local Democracy Reporting Service Labour MP Sir Alan Campbell urged the surgery to provide urgent treatments at commenting on his social media post said the changes were "devastating" and it was "impossible to find NHS dentist in the area".North Tyneside Council director of public health, Wendy Burke, said she was concerned about access to NHS dental services in the area and about the impact of the decision "now and in the future". ICB chief procurement and contracting officer David Gallagher said the practice was in a difficult situation but "they have not asked to end their contract and they remain an NHS service provider"."We are working with the provider with a view to fully understanding the issues, offering support where possible and to provide clarity and reassurance to patients," he said. Follow BBC North East on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.

‘I'd rather die than go back there': How a vulnerable teenager was failed by a scandal-hit hospital
‘I'd rather die than go back there': How a vulnerable teenager was failed by a scandal-hit hospital

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

‘I'd rather die than go back there': How a vulnerable teenager was failed by a scandal-hit hospital

Traumatised by months of forced feeding and isolation from her family on a secure psychiatric ward, 14-year-old Ruth Szymankiewicz fled her family home through a toilet window and flung herself into a freezing pond in a desperate attempt to get someone to listen. 'I'd rather die than go back to Huntercombe,' the teenager had warned just hours before her father Mark, dragged her from the icy water near their Berkshire home just after Christmas 2021. Two months later, Ruth was dead. The teenager died in hospital two days after having self-harmed when she was left unsupervised at Huntercombe Hospital in Maidenhead, where she should have had constant supervision. Her death sparked a three-year-long police investigation, which found the agency worker responsible for her care was working under a fake name and had completed just a day or a day and a half of online training before his first shift on the understaffed ward Ruth was on. Police were not able to question the worker, known as Ebo Achempong, as he had fled the country. Last week, a jury at her inquest made a rare ruling that her death amounted to an unlawful killing after a litany of failings in her care were uncovered at the 10-day hearing. Ruth, who had an eating disorder, Tourette syndrome and a tic condition, was placed at Huntercombe in October 2021 because her mental health had declined and she required feeding through a tube after refusing to eat. But while there, she was denied therapy to help her manage the often painful and traumatic tube feeding that kept her alive, she was left without regular access to psychologists and was only allowed to see her family twice a week. On a much-anticipated trip home for Christmas in 2021, the teenager was happy to be reunited with her family. But she soon became anxious about her return to Huntercombe and protested over being sent back. The night before she was to return, she self-harmed, and when it was time to leave, she squeezed herself out of a small downstairs toilet window and ran. Her father, Mark, followed her and watched on, horrified, as she entered the "icy bog", pleading with her to come out. When she refused, he pulled her out because she was becoming critically hypothermic, her inquest heard. He carried her back to the house, where the family warmed her up, but when the secure transport finally arrived to take her back to Huntercombe, the situation that unfolded left them 'absolutely broken'. In a statement read at the inquest, Ruth's mother Kate recounted the horrifying ordeal: 'We had to watch our daughter handcuffed and her legs taped together so that they could restrain her to get her into the transport. Our daughter was screaming throughout the whole ordeal. This was a breaking point for Mark and I. 'It absolutely broke us to see our daughter being treated this way and seeing her so distressed, but there was no other option given to us apart from for her to be sectioned and taken to Huntercombe, as nowhere else could help. We felt helpless. I think that Ruth also felt that she could see no way out of this.' Ruth's despair at her time spent on the Thames ward at Huntercombe was laid bare further in a handwritten note found after her death. Addressing it to 'important people', she complained about a lack of therapy for patients like her at the hospital, which she said had an 'unsafe number of staff'. The note read: 'I don't really know who this is really directed to... Huntercombe, it doesn't deserve a capital H. 'It is the s***test mental health institution you could get... the unsafe number of staff, how the place makes you worse, the staff literally sleep on their shifts. I don't want this to happen to any other patients ever. My suggestion is, shut this place down.' Eventually, more than a year after Ruth's death, Huntercombe Maidenhead, or Taplow Manor as it was renamed, was shut after a series of investigations by The Independent and Sky News, which revealed allegations of 'systemic abuse'. Patients sent to Huntercombe Group hospitals revealed how they felt like 'caged animals', with claims they were subjected to painful, bruising restraints, medicated so heavily they felt like 'zombies', and isolated from their families. Ruling that Ruth's death amounted to 'unlawful killing', jurors said there had been systematic failings not only at Huntercombe but by the NHS mental health system that funded her placement at the private equity-owned hospital. Clutching Ruth's stuffed Giraffe as they listened to harrowing evidence of their daughter's time at Huntercombe, her parents described how just a few years earlier, she had been happy. They recounted how their first-born child – a little girl 'with a head of bright red hair' - was a fiery and determined character with a 'huge heart', a 'deep passion for life' and a love of animals and the outdoors. But in December 2020, she suddenly developed physical and vocal tics, and the family faced an 18-month wait to access specialist care. In 2021, she developed an eating disorder and by August, she was admitted to Salisbury Hospital before she was sectioned under the Mental Health Act. Eventually, NHS officials decided she needed to be admitted to a specialist children's mental health unit, and she was taken to Huntercombe. Her parents told the inquest they felt pressured into agreeing to the move, and were soon 'trapped' in a system that was meant to care for Ruth, but instead 'locked her away and harmed her'. During her time at the hospital, the vulnerable teenager was allowed unfettered access to her mobile phone, which she was later found to have used to search for methods of self-harm. Throughout the inquest, multiple staff voiced concerns over short staffing in the unit, with a visibly distressed senior support worker, Michelle Hance, breaking down as she spoke detailed the pressures on workers. Dr Gillian Combe, a senior NHS doctor working for the Thames Valley provider collaborative, which was responsible for Ruth's admission to Huntercombe, admitted that the NHS did not do enough for the 14-year-old. She told the inquest the NHS was aware that the hospital was understaffed daily, and that there were concerns over the care it provided, but there were no other suitable choices available. She appeared to make a plea for more money to build the beds it 'desperately needed'. Standing outside of the Berkshire court room after the inquest concluded, Mark and Kate made a heartfelt plea for Ruth's story to matter: 'Remember Ruth's story. Remember her in the faces of the young people who look to you for help and support.' 'What happened to Ruth is shocking, tragic and harrowing. Whilst there is much more to be said, if change can come from her story, it can make a tangible difference to others.' In response to the ruling, Active Care Group, formerly known as The Huntercombe Group, said: 'We extend our heartfelt condolences to Ruth's family, friends, and all those affected by her passing. We deeply regret the tragic event that occurred, and we are truly sorry for the distress this has caused and recognise the profound impact it has had on everyone who knew her.' The group said it was disappointed that a third-party company it had hired had breached its terms of contract, though it did not state what the breach of contract was. It also said it had made improvements to the quality and safety of its services since.

West Midlands measles vaccine plea ahead of school term
West Midlands measles vaccine plea ahead of school term

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

West Midlands measles vaccine plea ahead of school term

Parents are being urged by health officials to make sure their children are vaccinated before the return to school as measles cases still circulate in the West of the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) jabs by age five is as low as 75.8% in parts of the region, according the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) - the World Health Organisation recommends a 95% uptake to prevent comes after Birmingham saw an outbreak in 2025 with 26 confirmed cases between January and June, government figures Spence, from the UKHSA, described measles as a "nasty virus" that can spread quickly among unvaccinated children and adults in places like schools and nurseries. "It can lead to serious health problems including ear and chest infections, inflammation of the brain, with some children ending up in hospital and being left with permanent disabilities. Tragically, in rare cases, it can even be fatal," she said."As children under the age of one cannot be vaccinated against measles, it's important siblings are vaccinated to protect little ones and other vulnerable people – including those with weakened immune systems – who are unable to have the MMR vaccine and rely on the rest of us to protect them from measles."She added that if parents are unsure about their child's vaccination record, they can check their Red Book, the NHS app or contact their GP surgery. In 2024, figures from the UKHSA showed 329 of 465 (71%) measles cases across England from October 2023 to February 2024 were in the West Midlands.A GP in the Sparkbrook area of Birmingham said at the time that, in the majority of cases, medics were seeing were in unvaccinated latest measles data from the UKHSA this summer revealed that there have been 674 laboratory-confirmed measles cases reported in England since 1 January, with 145 in 3-31 West Midlands had 34 out of the 674 cases. Follow BBC Birmingham on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store