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EUPSA/ERNICA

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Transition of Care - Sexuality

Video Published 2023-11-15 Updated 2026-06-02

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Topic Overview

Addresses sexuality as integral to quality of life for patients with congenital anomalies. Emphasizes early normalization (starting age 3-4), age-appropriate discussions, and multidisciplinary support to help patients navigate body image concerns, physical differences, and relationship development throughout childhood and adolescence.

Key Takeaways

  • Address sexuality early (age 3-4) when body awareness begins; prepare parents to normalize anatomical differences and build body confidence.
  • Provide information at 9-10 years old before adolescence so patients have tools to discuss physical differences with peers and seek support.
  • Include sexuality as standard in follow-up for all congenital anomalies, not just pelvic conditions; scars and deformities impact self-image.
  • Build multidisciplinary networks (psychologist, gynecologist, urologist, sexologist) to support patients with body image and relationship concerns.
  • Use consistent, age-appropriate terminology with patients and parents; normalize the topic to reduce shame and facilitate open discussion.

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