EDITORIAL
How Well Is the Multidisciplinary Model Working?
The classical approach to sexual dysfunction has
traditionally followed a divergent paradigm. If an
organic, physiologically based etiology was identi-
fied and could be addressed medically, the practi-
tioner most likely involved in treatment would be
a medicalhealth provider, such asa physician,
nurse practitioner, physician assistant, or pelvic
floor physical therapist. If no organic cause was
identified, the patient would leave the office with a
referralto a mentalhealth providerwith the
implicit (or even explicit) messagethat the
problem is primarily “in your head.”
This “either/or”mentalitycontinuesto pit
medical vs. mental health practitioners against one
another in the battle of “whose patient is this?”
Case discussions at multidisciplinary conferences
are a predictable forum for participants to offer
their often unidimensional perspectives. The case
of a healthy young man with erectile dysfunction
(ED), for example, can become the battleground
over the significance of the insufficiently tumes-
cent penis.To the physicians, the meaning is
physiological; it may be a potential markerfor
heart disease, and anyways, why subject the client
to talk therapy when a phosphodiesterase type 5
inhibitor can easily solve the problem? To sex
therapists, however,blood flow is secondary to
context, and ED may have psychological or socio-
logical significance. Is this an unconsummated
marriage in a traditional society where the man,
with little or no prior experience, is expected to
perform on hiswedding nightwith his equally
anxiousor possibly vaginistic bride? What role
does anxiety play in this man’s life? What is the
meaning of pleasure and why does he have diffi-
culty achieving it?
A paradigm shift has occurred, in theory at least,
as the multifactorial nature of sexual problems has
become better appreciated, in part due to publica-
tions in The Journal of Sexual Medicine ( JSM ) [1].
This is particularly true in the area of women’s
sexualhealth [2].The biopsychosocial modelof
women’s sexual function posits that physiological
and organic factors, together with emotional well-
being,mood,socialand culturalinfluences, and
relationship context, all play a role in sexual func-
tion. Practically, however, this model continues to
be problematic as medical practitioners deal with
the “physical part” while mental health practitio-
ners address the psyche. Too often,the woman’s
“issues”are compartmentalized in treatment,
leaving the woman feeling fragmented and her
treatment, unintegrated.
We can look at sexual pain disorders to exem-
plify this problem.Sexualpain disordersare
understood to havemultifactorialcomponents.
While researchhas focusedon physiological
mechanisms, cognitive and affective factors are
recognized to have an important role [3]. Higher
catasrophizing, fear of pain,hypervigilance, and
lower self-efficacy have all been associated with
increased intercourse pain intensity [4]. Tradi-
tional biopsychosocialconceptualizationsof
vaginismusanddyspareuniacompartmentalize
the treatmentby designating the physiological
aspects to physicians, and the psychosocial aspects
including anxiety and aversion, to mentalhealth
professionals including psychotherapists and sex
therapists. In this algorithm,treatmentof the
pelvic floor muscles (the physical manifestation of
the emotionally anxious state)is designated to
physiotherapists.
This design is problematic for many reasons. In
the physiotherapy clinical setting,for example,
fear avoidance and anxiety are significant charac-
teristics ofthe patient’s response, which mirrors
their experience in sexual intercourse. Treatment,
which attends to pelvic floor dysfunction without
addressing the patient’s emotional experience of
vulnerability and fear or the meaning of penetra-
tion in her sexual and nonsexual life, or the dynam-
ics of her relationship may not only fail to help but
may also cause additional harm. The physiothera-
pist may be perceived as one other coercive voice
in her life. Addressing the patient’s anxiety and
vulnerability later in the comfort and nonjudg-
mentalpsychotherapy office replaces the physio-
therapy room as the safe and containing place.
As a pelvic floorphysiotherapist, I struggled
with my limitations in a multidisciplinary model
that attributed to me only the woman’s pelvic
floor. While physiotherapists know how to deal
with pain avoidance, the treatment model is based
on cognitive and behavioral motivation (“you can
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© 2011 International Society for Sexual Medicine J Sex Med 2011;8:2957–2958