Themes: Clitoral Anatomy, Cosmetic Genital Procedures, Medical Misinformation
Summary:
Despite labiaplasty being one of the fastest-growing medical procedures in the past two decades, detailed clitoral anatomy has been largely missing from medical literature and curricula. Horrifying, right? My guest today is Jessica Pin, who is an advocate for the correction of medical misinformation about vulvas after experiencing a labiaplasty gone wrong at the age of 18.
Jessica has since launched into advocacy and has successfully had eight major medical textbooks update their content, with 15 more considering to future updates. She has also published a cadaveric study with plastic surgeons, convinced OB/GYNs to publish a cadaveric study, and effected changes in OB/GYN and plastic surgery board certification, standardized consent forms, and residency curricula. She holds a degree in Biomedical Engineering from Washington University in St. Louis.
Discover:
Jessica's story of a botched labiaplasty at 18 years old and being gaslit and dismissed by medical professionals
How this experience led her to become an advocate for the inclusion of detailed clitoral anatomy in medical literature and curricula
Why clitoral anatomy isn't covered in medical literature
The surprising lack of training standards for female cosmetic genital surgeries
The biggest misconceptions in female anatomy
Links:
Follow Jessica on Instagram at @jessica_ann_pin
TikTok: @jessica_ann_pin
Sign Jessica's petition to get nerves of the clitoris into the American College of OB/GYN curriculum here.
Sponsors:
Organifi | Use code CREATETHELOVE for 20% off all products at organifi.com/createthelove
Create the Love Cards | Use code CTLCARDS15 for 15% off at createthelove.com/cards
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Summary:
Despite labiaplasty being one of the fastest-growing medical procedures in the past two decades, detailed clitoral anatomy has been largely missing from medical literature and curricula. Horrifying, right? My guest today is Jessica Pin, who is an advocate for the correction of medical misinformation about vulvas after experiencing a labiaplasty gone wrong at the age of 18.
Jessica has since launched into advocacy and has successfully had eight major medical textbooks update their content, with 15 more considering to future updates. She has also published a cadaveric study with plastic surgeons, convinced OB/GYNs to publish a cadaveric study, and effected changes in OB/GYN and plastic surgery board certification, standardized consent forms, and residency curricula. She holds a degree in Biomedical Engineering from Washington University in St. Louis.
Discover:
Jessica's story of a botched labiaplasty at 18 years old and being gaslit and dismissed by medical professionals
How this experience led her to become an advocate for the inclusion of detailed clitoral anatomy in medical literature and curricula
Why clitoral anatomy isn't covered in medical literature
The surprising lack of training standards for female cosmetic genital surgeries
The biggest misconceptions in female anatomy
Links:
Follow Jessica on Instagram at @jessica_ann_pin
TikTok: @jessica_ann_pin
Sign Jessica's petition to get nerves of the clitoris into the American College of OB/GYN curriculum here.
Sponsors:
Organifi | Use code CREATETHELOVE for 20% off all products at organifi.com/createthelove
Create the Love Cards | Use code CTLCARDS15 for 15% off at createthelove.com/cards
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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