2011
DOI: 10.1159/000328810
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Management of Female Sexual Pain Disorders

Abstract: Our understanding of the sexual pain disorders vaginismus and dyspareunia has been fundamentally altered over the past two decades due to increased attention and empirically sound research in this domain. This increased knowledge base has included a shift from a dualistic view of the etiology of painful and/or difficult vaginal penetration being due to either psychological or physiological causes, to a multifactorial perspective. The present chapter reviews current classification and prevalence rates, includin… Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…However, there has been much less commentary on the medicalization of sexual pain-currently a subset of an official FSD diagnosis (American Psychiatric Association [APA], 2000). Practitioners and critics alike recognize that sexual pain is a unique case among a multitude of sexual problems (Boyer, Goldfinger, Thibault-Gagnon, & Pukall, 2011). Whereas a concept such as (dys)functional sexual desire lends itself to debate as to whether it is an objectively measurable phenomenon relevant to the domain of health (Meana, 2010), sexual pain has a more obvious relationship to biomedicine's expertise in pain pathways and pain reduction.…”
Section: Thea Cacchionimentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, there has been much less commentary on the medicalization of sexual pain-currently a subset of an official FSD diagnosis (American Psychiatric Association [APA], 2000). Practitioners and critics alike recognize that sexual pain is a unique case among a multitude of sexual problems (Boyer, Goldfinger, Thibault-Gagnon, & Pukall, 2011). Whereas a concept such as (dys)functional sexual desire lends itself to debate as to whether it is an objectively measurable phenomenon relevant to the domain of health (Meana, 2010), sexual pain has a more obvious relationship to biomedicine's expertise in pain pathways and pain reduction.…”
Section: Thea Cacchionimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most recently, biopsychosocial frameworks have been favored in lieu of or in addition to strictly biomedical factors, with the intention of moving beyond reductionist perspectives (Boyer et al, 2011). Yet, research aimed to illuminate social, relational, and psychological aspects of women's sexual pain experience is often framed in a reductive way, resulting in the presentation of sexual pain and related phenomena as fractured statistical constructs.…”
Section: Understanding Sexual Painmentioning
confidence: 99%
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