Tele-Health for Sexual Pain Disorders during COVID-19 Pandemic
Wednesday, May 27, 2020 at 5 pm PST / 7 pm CST / 8 pm EST
ISSWSH members Susan Kellogg-Spadt, Amy Stein and Caroline Pukall discuss how to treat sexual pain disorders in the age of tele-health and COVID-19. Topics include:
- Perspective of Sex Med Provider: Susan Kellogg- Spadt, PhD, CRNP, IF
- Perspective of Physical Therapist: Amy Stein, DPT, BCM-PMD, IF
- Perspective of Sex Therapist: Caroline Pukall, PhD, CPsych

Rachel S. Rubin, MD, IFModerator

Tami Rowen, MD, MSModerator
Meet the Speakers

Susan Kellogg-Spadt, PhD, CRNP, IF
Dr. Susan Kellogg-Spadt is the Director of Female Sexual Medicine at The Center for Pelvic Medicine in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania; Professor of OB/GYN at Drexel University College of Medicine; Professor of Human Sexuality at Widener University; Associate Professor at Rutgers University Robert Wood Johnson School of Medicine and Clinical Associate faculty at the University of Pennsylvania and Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia . She is a Fellow of the International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health and serves on the executive Board of the National Vulvodynia Association. She also serves as the Chair of the Global Development Committee and serves on the Board of Directors for the International Society for the Study of Women's Sexual Health.

Amy Stein, DPT, BCM-PMD, IF
Dr. Amy Stein is a leading expert and at the forefront of treating pelvic floor dysfunction, pelvic pain, women’s health, and functional manual therapy for men, women, and children. She is the founder of, and a premier practitioner at Beyond Basics Physical Therapy in NYC. She is the author of the award-winning book, Heal Pelvic Pain. Amy served as the President and on the board of the International Pelvic Pain Society and is currently on their advisory board. She is a Fellow of the International Society for the Study of Women's Sexual Health.

Caroline Pukall, PhD, CPsych
Dr. Caroline Pukall is Full Professor in the Department of Psychology and the Director of the Sex and Relationship Therapy Service at the Psychology Clinic at Queen’s University. Caroline’s research lab—the Sexual Health Research Laboratory (SexLab.ca)—conducts inclusive research projects examining various aspects of sexuality, including vulvodynia, persistent genital arousal, sexual arousal, women’s health issues (e.g., postpartum pain and sexuality), and other topics.