Abstract

BackgroundFemale sexual dysfunction is a prevalent condition affecting 12% of women, yet few academic centers in the US have female sexual medicine programs.AimTo characterize female sexual health programs in the United States, services offered, and training of female sexual health providers.MethodsWe performed an internet search to identify female sexual health programs and clinics in the US. From each programs’ website we abstracted the location, clinic setting (academic vs private), training of providers, and whether the clinic provided investigational services (ie, PRP injections, laser/radiofrequency therapy). We categorized clinics as specialized in sexual medicine, specialized with a focus on cancer patients, general, aesthetics-focused, general & aesthetic, or specialized & aesthetic. We used Chi-square and Fisher's exact test to evaluate association between practice setting and provision of investigational therapies with a Bonferroni-adjusted critical P-value of 0.017.OutcomesOur outcomes were the number of clinics in each setting, in each category, and each state, as well as the number of providers by training type.ResultsWe identified 235 female sexual medicine programs in the United States. Seventeen percent were in the academic setting. Clinics in the non-academic setting were significantly (α = 0.017) more likely to offer PRP injections (0% vs 47%, P < .001), laser/radiofrequency therapy (14% vs 56%, P < .0001), and shockwave therapy (0% vs 14%, P = .011). Among all clinics, 22% provided specialized care, 2% provided care for cancer patients, 29% were more general clinics that advertised female sexual healthcare, 23% were aesthetics-focused, 22% were general practices that provided aesthetics services, and 2% were specialized clinics that offered aesthetics services. 81% of aesthetics-focused clinics advertised PRP injections. Seven states had no clinics and 26 states lacked a clinic specializing in female sexual health. The most frequent providers were OB/Gyns (40%), nurse practitioners (22%), urologists (13%), and physicians assistants (10%).Clinical ImplicationsThe geographic distribution of clinics and pervasiveness of clinics offering investigational services for female sexual dysfunction may be a barrier for patients seeking care.LimitationsAs a result of our internet search methodology, we likely did not capture all clinics providing female sexual health services. Further, the accuracy of our data depends on the level of detail provided on each clinics’ website.ConclusionOnline search identified few clinics providing female sexual healthcare in academic medicine: development of such clinics could benefit patients by improving access to evidence-based care and promoting training of future providers.Elizabeth E. Stanley and Rachel J. Pope, Characteristics of Female Sexual Health Programs and Providers in the United States. Sex Med 2022;10:100524.

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