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Sexual Health

/ Sexual Dysfunctions

Sexual Dysfunctions

The health problems that are most difficult for our families and individuals to talk about are sexual dysfunctions.

The number of physicians working in the field of sexual health, including urologists, gynecologists, and psychiatrists, is also limited.

Sexual dysfunctions are never possible with the rapid solutions we surgeons are accustomed to.

It takes time.

It requires serious empathy.

It requires effort for both the physician, the individual, and the family.

Whether it's a solution to vaginismus, orgasm disorders, premature ejaculation, or erectile dysfunction, serious time is needed. There are also homework assignments for individuals and couples.

Serious sexual questions are posed via Instagram, WhatsApp, or email, and it's assumed that lengthy answers will solve the problem. Sometimes, even colleagues in my generation ask, "What do you recommend for this diagnosis? What medication should we prescribe?"

However, sexual health and organic disorders are intertwined with couples therapy, communication, psychology, and family counseling, and the treatment process is carried out together. It takes at least two months to restructure a family's sexual life. We cannot make long-term, lasting improvements without a history of past communication and habits.

There are nearly 20 treatment options and combinations specifically for vaginismus. While some cases can be resolved in 1-5 days, some cases may require surgery. Each treatment plan is tailored to the dynamics and needs of the individual, couple, and family. Therefore, it is very difficult to plan treatment without a preliminary consultation.

It's not easy for individuals to discuss their sexual habits. Obtaining detailed medical histories from patients is challenging.

It is not easy at all to save his family, to gather them, to spare time and effort.

Our society is one that has not developed the habit of improving its sexual health.

They feel helpless.

They are ashamed.

They think it cannot be solved.

They don't know who to go to or who will solve it most easily.

Some men don't want to pay their wives. "It'll be okay," they say.

Some women use it as leverage against their husbands. They don't want to get better.

In short, treating sexual dysfunctions is only possible if the individual herself and then her husband want it together.

Sexual treatments are not treatments that can be solved by the pressure of the spouse or parents.

OUR MOTTO: WANT TO HEAL FIRST SO THAT HEALING CAN REACH YOU

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