Conference Coverage

VIDEO: Overcoming barriers to discussing sexual dysfunction


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM PSYCHIATRY UPDATE 2014

CHICAGO – "We’re often not very well educated in medical school or in our residencies about how to talk to patients about sexual functioning and dysfunction," according to Dr. Anita H. Clayton, the interim chair of psychiatry and neurobehavioral sciences, and David C. Wilson Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville.

"Very often we feel we don’t have time to talk about it [with patients]," Dr. Clayton adds in this video recorded during the 2014 Psychiatry Update sponsored by Current Psychiatry and the American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists, where Dr. Clayton was a presenter.

Patients might schedule an appointment with a doctor to talk about one thing, but what they really hope to discuss is their sexual dysfunction, despite not quite knowing how to go about it. When a provider can overcome his or her own embarrassment about the topic, "Patients often open up very easily, and they really do want to talk," says Dr. Clayton, also professor of clinical obstetrics and gynecology at the university.

Hear how Dr. Clayton suggests providers approach the sensitive topic of sexual dysfunction to help their patients return to having a healthy sex life.

Current Psychiatry and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

wmcknight@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @whitneymcknight

Recommended Reading

Depression at least five times more common than PTSD after critical illness
MDedge Family Medicine
Intervention manages cardiac patients with depression, anxiety
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Link found between neuroinflammation and suicide attempts
MDedge Family Medicine
Studies highlight insomnia-depression link, underscore role for brief CBT
MDedge Family Medicine
Tobacco use tied to 53% of deaths in schizophrenia patients
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Virtual adjunct psychotherapies used to de-escalate suicide risk
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: No longer ‘haunted’: a novel treatment for PTSD
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Some SSRIs are better than others for pregnant women
MDedge Family Medicine
More conclusive link needed on teratogenicity and atypicals in pregnancy
MDedge Family Medicine
VIDEO: Insomnia is a marker for suicide and depression
MDedge Family Medicine