Time | Segment | Presenter | Content |
0–10 min | Welcome, CE Orientation, Scope of Practice | Both | Program goals, confidentiality in online learning, boundaries between sex therapy, pelvic PT, and medical prescribing; overview of interdisciplinary model. |
10–30 min | Menopause Foundations for Clinicians | Sex therapist | Definitions: perimenopause, menopause, postmenopause, surgical menopause, premature/early menopause; common symptom clusters: sleep, mood, vasomotor symptoms, sexual changes, urinary/genital changes. |
30–50 min | Sexual Health Changes in Menopause | Sex therapist | Desire, arousal, orgasm, lubrication, pain, avoidance, shame, relationship distress, identity changes, “I should still want sex” narratives, and partner misunderstanding. |
50–70 min | Genitourinary Syndrome of Menopause and Sexual Pain | Pelvic PT | GSM symptoms, vulvovaginal dryness, irritation, burning, dyspareunia, urinary urgency/frequency/recurrent UTI concerns, tissue sensitivity, and when symptoms require medical assessment. |
70–85 min | Clinical Screening Questions | Both | How to ask about pain, libido, lubrication, orgasm, urinary symptoms, trauma history, cancer history, hormone use, medications, relationship context, and religious/cultural values without over-pathologizing. |
85–95 min | Interactive Case Poll | Both | Case vignette: menopausal client with low desire, painful penetration, avoidance, and partner distress. Participants identify possible contributors and referral priorities. |
95–120 min | Pelvic Physical Therapy Framework | Pelvic PT | Pelvic floor overactivity vs. weakness, guarding, breathing, down-training, graded exposure, dilator work, manual therapy concepts, home programs, urinary symptoms, and how clinicians can explain pelvic PT to clients. |
120–145 min | Sex Therapy Interventions | Sex therapist | Psychoeducation, permission-giving, sensate focus modifications, sexual communication, grief and identity work, desire discrepancy, responsive desire, mindfulness, pacing, pleasure mapping, and partner-inclusive treatment. |
145–160 min | Integrating Medical and Nonmedical Care | Both | Lubricants, moisturizers, vaginal estrogen/DHEA/ospemifene discussion as referral topics, nonhormonal vasomotor options, testosterone/HSDD referral considerations, oncology-sensitive care, and collaboration with prescribers. |
160–172 min | Diversity, Ethics, and Trauma-Informed Practice | Both | LGBTQ+ clients, clients after hysterectomy/oophorectomy/cancer treatment, disability, cultural modesty, religious values, sexual trauma, informed consent, scope of competence, avoiding coercive “just have sex” messaging. |
172–180 min | Summary, Clinical Takeaways, Q&A | Both | Three-part clinical map: screen, normalize, refer/collaborate. Final questions and post-program instructions. |