『Seven Gynecologists Refused Her Before She Got Help | Mathilde Olstad on Vulvovaginal Pain』のカバーアート

Seven Gynecologists Refused Her Before She Got Help | Mathilde Olstad on Vulvovaginal Pain

Seven Gynecologists Refused Her Before She Got Help | Mathilde Olstad on Vulvovaginal Pain

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At 25, Mathilde Olstad's life was on track: a new relationship, a finance degree nearly finished, a career about to launch. Then pain during sex appeared out of nowhere, Then pain during sex appeared out of nowhere, and it didn't go away. What followed was years of dismissal, dead ends, expensive alternative treatments, and being refused by seven gynecologists before she could access specialized care. Instead of staying silent, she turned her experience into The World's Tightest Community, a podcast reaching thousands of women living with vulvovaginal pain.In this episode, Dr. Sameena Rahman sits down with Mathilde Olstad, creator and host of The World's Tightest Community, a podcast dedicated to vulvovaginal health, chronic pelvic pain, and breaking the silence around conditions like vulvodynia, vestibulodynia, and vaginismus.Mathilde shares her story from the beginning: the sudden onset of burning vestibular pain at 25, a GP who told her everything looked fine, a year and a half of waiting, and the excruciating speculum exam where the shock on her providers' faces told her everything about how unprepared the system was for patients like her. She describes the desperate search that followed, from mainstream treatments to $1,500 herbal prescriptions, and the profound loneliness of never seeing anyone else who had walked this road.The conversation goes global: why the latest research in vulvovaginal pain isn't crossing the Atlantic, what it took for Mathilde to access Norway's public vulvar clinic after seven gynecologists refused to take her on, and why so many complex pain patients become what clinicians call "heartsink patients." Dr. Rahman and Mathilde also dig into the visual language of these conditions, why "you are not alone" rings hollow when you can't see a single face, and how a Reddit community became the spark for a podcast that now reaches patients and clinicians around the world.Mathilde shares her story from the beginning: the sudden onset of burning when having sex she went to her GP who told her everything looked fine, a year and a half of waiting, and the excruciating speculum exam where the shock on her providers' faces told her everything about how unprepared the system was for patients like her. She describes the desperate search that followed, from mainstream treatments to $1,500 herbal prescriptions, and the profound loneliness of never seeing anyone else who had walked this road.Our conversation goes global: why the latest research in vulvovaginal pain isn't crossing the Atlantic, what it took for Mathilde to access Norway's public vulvar clinic, and why so many complex pain patients become what clinicians call "heartsink patients." We also dig into the visual language of these conditions, why "you are not alone" rings hollow when you can't see a single face, and how a Reddit community became the spark for a podcast that now reaches patients and clinicians around the world.Remember, these are not easy stories for women to share, especially when they've had to tell them so many times. My hope in bringing guests like Mathilde on the show is that it brings more awareness, more training, and the comfort of knowing you are truly not alone in this journey.I also want the clinicians listening to hear this with an open mind, not shame. So many of us were never taught about these conditions. But not having the answer is never a reason to make a patient feel like she's the problem. What she needs from us is empathy, curiosity, and honesty about what we don't know.Highlights:Vulvovaginal pain conditions like vulvodynia, vestibulodynia, and vaginismus are common, with estimates ranging from 8 to 28 percent of women experiencing them in their lifetime, yet they remain under-researched and widely dismissed.Sudden-onset pain with sex is not "just anxiety" and should prompt a real diagnostic workup, including a vulvar exam, vestibular assessment, and pelvic floor evaluation.A diagnosis label like vulvodynia is only a starting point; without a differential assessment of drivers (hormonal, inflammatory, neuroproliferative, muscular), patients are left with trial and error.Pelvic floor involvement is nearly universal in vestibular pain, because anticipating pain leads to clenching and hypertonicity that outlasts the original trigger.The knowledge gap between North America and Europe in sexual medicine is real: patients abroad often can't access treatments, and some specialists are unfamiliar with current concepts in the field.Recovery is rarely one breakthrough; for Mathilde it was cumulative, including pelvic floor physical therapy, osteopathic work on diaphragm tension, and most recently pelvic floor Botox.Social media has forced real change in women's health, from IUD pain management to mainstream conversations about menopause, but vulvovaginal pain still lags behind.By the time a woman with these conditions reaches a new clinician, she has almost always been dismissed before; believing the ...
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