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LAST CHANCE! OFFER ENDS Sun, Apr 19Advance your PA career with comprehensive sexual dysfunction training. Learn ED evaluation and treatment, female sexual health, hormone therapy protocols, and the latest regenerative approaches. Qualify for high-demand positions in urology, men's health, and functional medicine.
Your PA training provides an excellent foundation for sexual dysfunction care. This specialty offers rewarding patient relationships, competitive compensation, and strong job market demand.
A comprehensive curriculum building on your PA foundation to prepare you for sexual health specialty practice.
Build on your PA assessment skills with specialized ED classification (neurogenic, vasculogenic, psychogenic, mixed, iatrogenic), targeted history-taking, physical examination techniques, and laboratory interpretation for sexual health conditions.
Master oral medication management, Intracavernous Pharmacotherapy (ICP) principles, vacuum devices, and referral criteria for surgical options. Learn dosing, contraindications, and individualized treatment planning.
Evaluate and treat desire disorders, arousal disorders, orgasmic dysfunction, dyspareunia, and vaginismus using evidence-based clinical and integrative approaches.
Learn BHRT protocols for testosterone deficiency and female hormonal issues. Understand testing, interpretation, and integration with sexual dysfunction treatment.
Develop skills for discussing sensitive topics professionally, managing expectations, and building therapeutic relationships with sexual health patients.
Understand practice settings, job opportunities, compensation structures, and how to position yourself for sexual health PA positions.
Understanding your practice authority and supervision for sexual health services as a PA.
PAs can diagnose and treat sexual dysfunction in all 50 states as part of their delegated scope of practice under physician supervision. The level of supervision varies by state, with many allowing general supervision where the physician doesn't need to be physically present. States with Optimal Team Practice (OTP) legislation allow greater PA autonomy. Your supervising physician and state PA board determine the specific supervision requirements for sexual health services in your practice.
Urology practices, men's health clinics, functional medicine offices, women's health centers, and wellness practices actively recruit PAs with sexual health training.
Work with urologists, endocrinologists, or primary care physicians who supervise sexual health services. Many specialty practices provide the supervisory relationship you need.
Join established urology practices, men's health clinics, or functional medicine offices where the physician supervision structure is already in place for sexual health services.
Sexual dysfunction affects over half of men ages 40-70 and millions of women, yet few providers are trained to help. PAs with sexual health expertise are highly valued by practices struggling to meet patient demand. Your medical model training and procedural skills make you an ideal provider for these services.
PAs excel in collaborative practice environments, the standard model for sexual health care. Work alongside urologists, endocrinologists, mental health providers, and other specialists to deliver comprehensive patient care. Your training in team-based medicine prepares you well for this multidisciplinary approach.
Browse upcoming Sexual Dysfunction training courses. All courses include comprehensive didactic instruction and case studies.
Common questions about sexual dysfunction training for physician assistants.
Join physician assistants who are building rewarding careers in sexual dysfunction treatment with AAOPM training. Register today or speak with our team.
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