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So your partner wants to take Viagra. That’s very generous of him considering he’ll be taking a prescription drug partly to benefit you. If we can speak within the trust for a moment, most women know that their partners don’t ask their doctors enough questions or take enough precautions about their health. So when your partner starts taking a new drug, you know you partially just took on a new responsibility—the responsibility of learning about it, looking out for side effects, and making sure he takes it the right way. While your boo is all excited about his new found superpowers in the bedroom, you’re on the side reading drug warning labels and perusing WebMd (and pretending you’re only 100 percent excited too and not at all worried). So, to follow in that theme, here are things you should know before your partner takes Viagra.

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Young men do take it

Don’t be too concerned if your partner feels he needs to take Viagra. Around 50 percent of men aged 40 to 70 (yup, even young forty-year-olds) struggle to get enough blood flow to their penis.

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It takes time

It takes between 30 and 60 minutes for the pill to kick in. So if your partner isn’t the greatest planner, but you know where things are headed after date night, you may want to remind him to take his pill early enough to let it work at the right time.

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There are a lot of fakes

If your partner comes home excited about a discount he got on “generic” Viagra, tell him to march that back to the store for a refund. There is no generic Viagra, but there are a lot of counterfits that can have side effects. Only go for the real thing.

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You shouldn’t take it

When he’s feeling particularly adventurous, your partner might suggest you take some, too. And while Samantha famously does so in that one episode of “Sex and the City,” it isn’t advised. We aren’t entirely certain how it affects the female body yet.