Assessment and Treatment of Sexual Dysfunctions Flashcards

1
Q

Mind the Gap! There is limited training across healthcare disciplines… such as?

A
  • Medicine
  • Nursing
  • Occupational Therapy
  • Psychiatry
  • Psychology
  • Social Work

Many of these professions have very limited training in sexual health.

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2
Q

What does UBC Medical Education do to address the gap in sexual health?

A
  • Sensitive Interviewing for Sexual Dysfunctions
  • All second-year medical students
  • Two sessions based on cases
  • Standardized patients (someone will lived experience, volunteering to interact with the trainees)
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3
Q

Clinical Interview for Sexual Dysfunction?(9)

A
  • Demographic information
  • Presenting problem(s)
  • Personal distress
  • Symptom onset and duration (specifiers)
  • Biopsychosocial factors
  • Sexual technique (sufficient stimulation)
  • Sexual response (what part of the sexual response cycle is affected)
  • Partner’s response (interpersonal)
  • Treatments to date
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4
Q

PLISSIT Model? (Annon, 1976)

A

P: Obtaining Permission from the individual to initiate sexual discussion. Giving individual Permission to raise sexual issues.

Li: Providing the Limited Information needed to support sexual function.

SS: Giving Specific Suggestions for the individual to proceed with sexual activity.

IT: Providing Intensive Therapy surrounding the issues of sexuality for the individual

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5
Q

PLISST Model? (Annon, 1976) Example?

A

P: “Is there anything about your sexual health you would like to discuss today?”

Li: “Some people with depression experience difficulties with obtaining or maintaining erections”

SS: “You may benefit from engaging in non-penetrative sexual activities with your partner.”

IT: “Your sexual health is important. I’d like to refer you to someone with expertise in treating erectile disorder”

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6
Q

Multidisciplinary Care?

Vulvar Pain Assessment Clinic, who is involved and what do they contribute? (3)

A
  1. Gynaecologist
    - Diagnosis of vulvodynia
    - Treatment planning
  2. Registered Psychologist
    - Assess contributing facotrs
    - Provide pain psychoeducation (research)
  3. Physiotherapist
    - Assess pelvic floor muscles
    - Teach PFM exercises
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7
Q

Biomedical Treatments - Pharmacotherapy for Erectile Disorder?

A
  • PDE-5 inhibitors increase blood flow, but only if paired with sexual stimulation.
  • Most people who receive a prescription do not fill it
  • Those who fill it, only about 50% refill it… why?

(Stimga around picking it up and using it, having to plan the sexual encounter, having positive experiences and boosting confidence and no longer needing it, it is expensive and sometimes not covered by insurance)

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8
Q

Biomedical Treatments - Pharmacotherapy for Low Sexual Desire? What medication?

A

Flibanserin (Addyi) is approved by US FDA and Health Canada for use in women with low desire. A pill you have to take every day/

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9
Q

Flibanserin (Addyi) - Clinical trials and polarising?

A

Clinical trials
- Daily use = 0.5 “satisfying sexual events” per month vs. placebo (very small change)
- Side effects: drowsiness, dizziness, nausea, fatigue

Two Polarizing sources:
- Even the Score, promoting more access to pharmacological sexual interventions. Equlity framework.
- The New View Campain, we shouldn’t pathologize low sexual drive and should instead consider societal and contextual factors.

Low uptake by both prescribers and patients.

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10
Q

Biomedical Treatments - Pharmacotherapy for GPPPD?

A

Lidocane

  • Topical (numbing) cream applied before sex
  • OR Applied nightly on a cotton swab
  • Applied vuvlarvesibule and not on the clitoris
  • May cause burning
  • Not very effective, still many doctors prescribe it
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11
Q

Biomedical Treatments - Pelvic Floor Physiotherapy?

A
  • First line treatment for GPPD
  • Vaginal inserts
  • Practice in clinic and at home
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12
Q

Psychological Treatments - Cognitive-behavioural therapies (CBT)?

A

-> Emotions -> Thoughts -> Behaviours ->

These three concepts intersect, meaning that if we change our thoughts it’ll affect our emotions and behaviours.

It is easiest to act on our thoughts and behaviour, but not our emotions.

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13
Q

Psychological Treatments - Mindfullness-based therapies (MBT)?

A

-> Awareness -> Present moment -> Acceptance ->

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14
Q

Evidence-based Psychological Treatments + Effect size?

A
  • Support for group, couple, and individual CBT (All female sexual dysfunctions, erectile dysfunction)
  • Lack of studies for PE and DE, expert opinion supports CBT
  • Mindfulness-based sex therapy (low desire, pain)
  • Directed masturbation training (orgasmic disorder)

Effect sizes:
d = .57 (symptom severity) moderate effect
d = .47 (sexual satisfaction) moderate effect

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15
Q

Treatment for PE

A
  • Stop-start-squeeze techniques
  • Practise building control
  • High success rates (over 95%)
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16
Q

Cognitive-Behavioural COUPLE Therapy?

A

The interaction cycle between thoughts, behaviours, and emotions is considered for both partners AND seeing how their behaviours interact with this cycle.

16
Q

Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy?

What they did:
148 participants were randomly assigned to the mindfulness (active intervention) or STEP (just information) groups.

Participants completed questionnaires about…
- sexual desire/arousal
- sexual distress
- relationship satisfaction

…before and after 8 sessions of treatment.

What they found?

A

Both treatments helped increase sexual desire and decrease sexual distress.

Mindfulness was slightly more helpful at reducing sexual distress and improving relationship satisfaction compared to STEP.

  • Sexual desire and arousal
  • Sexual distress
  • Relationship satisfaction
  • Rumination about sex
17
Q

CBCT for vulvodynia (GPPPD)

108 Couples Diagnosed with provoked vestibulodynia by gynecologist

Compared Cognitive-Behavioural Couple Therapy
- 60-minute CBCT sessions with PhD-trained therapist for 12 weeks

AND

Topical Lidocaine
- Apply 5% topical lidocaine ointment on a cotton pad to the entrance of the vagina overnight for 12 weeks

A

Both treatments lowers the intensity of pain but…

Cognitive-Behavioural Couple Therapy address:
- Sexual distress
- Tx satisfaction
- Catastrophizing
- Anxiety
- Unpleasantness
- Intensity

Whereas topical Lidocaine only addresses:
- Intensity

18
Q

Sex Therapy Techniques - Psycoeducation?

A
  • Education on sexual response cycles
  • Education on changes due to aging
  • Basic genital anatomy and physiology
  • Importance of sexual stimulation and diversifying of sexual stimulation and diversifying sexual menu
  • Readings on specific dysfunctions

A strong lack of information about sex is a strong predictor of sexual difficulties.

19
Q

Addressing Common myths/beliefs?

A
  • Desire should be spontaneous
  • Orgasms should come from intercourse only
  • Only intercourse counts as sex
  • Foreplay is for kids
  • Good sex must end with orgasm(s)
  • Fantasizing about something else means I am not happy with my current partner
  • Sex requires an erection (first)
  • All physical contact must lead to sex (intercourse)
  • A man is always ready for sex
  • A man should be able to last all night
  • Too much masturbation is bad
20
Q

Targeting Anxiety?

A

Performance anxiety, around sex.

We can intervene with that anxiety with different mindfulness exercises like breathing and relaxation.

21
Q

Restructing Unhelpful Thinking Styles?

All-or-nothing thinking

A

Thkining in extremes. Viewing a situation as either good or bad, right or wrong.

“Intercourse is the right way to have sex.”

22
Q

Restructing Unhelpful Thinking Styles?

Over-generalizing

A

Taking one instance in the past and imposing it on all future situations.

“My partner said no to a new sexual activity so they will never want to try something new.”

23
Q

Restructing Unhelpful Thinking Styles?

Catastrophizing

A

Expecting that the worst possible thing will happen.

“If I don’t have enough sex my partner will leave me.”

24
Q

Restructing Unhelpful Thinking Styles?

Mental Filter

A

Only paying attention to one part of the situation and ignoring the rest.

“There is no point to date night if we don’t have sex.”

25
Q

Sensate Focus? Unique to sex therapy techniques + Antidote to?

A
  • Touch for interest in sensations rather than for a particular emotional or sexual response
  • Touch for your interest rather than for your partner
  • Manage your distractions when you find your attention going to anything other than touch sensations.
  • After the exercise talk about it, take sex off the table focus on connecting with your body and practice communication.
  • Antidote to spectatoring during sex
26
Q

Communication skills training?

A
  • Effective emotional expression
  • Reflective listening
  • Disclosure; empathic responsiveness; validation
  • Assertiveness in communicating your needs