White Coat Black Art 26:30 Sex medicine doctors are putting women’s health, and pleasure, first A small number of Canadian doctors specializing in women's sexual health is trying to address what they say is a near-total lack of support for those suffering from common problems such as low libido, difficulty achieving orgasm and pain during intercourse. "In terms of the juxtaposition with men's sexual functioning, we are behind and it's really frustrating," said Dr. Stephanie Finn of Oakville, Ont.
Finn is one of five Canadian doctors trained by the International Society for the Study of Women's Sexual Health (ISSWSH), based in Burnsville, Minn. While help for male sexual dysfunction has been widely available since erectile dysfunction drug Viagra burst onto the scene — approved for use in Canada in 1999 — women's sexual health has remained largely shrouded in secrecy. "When's the last time your doctor has asked you about your clitoris? Like never, and that's fascinating, right? We ask men all the time about their penises and their function, sexual functioning and such," she told White Coat, Black Art .
"I think that there is generally a lack everywhere of interest in women's sexual functioning, and I'm happy to say that I think that's beginning to change." Dr. Stephanie Finn is a family doctor focusing on women’s sexual medicine.
(Colleen Ross/CBC) Originally a family doctor, Finn found that so many of her female patients needed help with sexual issues that she decided.