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Physicians
Dr. Irwin Goldstein
Dr. Goldstein is the director of San Diego Sexual Medicine and director of sexual medicine at Alvarado Hospital in San Diego. He acknowledges the existence of PSSD and has led the way in its treatment. Read about some of his tests on the physical diagnostics page.
In 2013 CNN did an article about his pioneering work in the sexual medicine field.
http://www.cnn.com/2013/05/31/health/lifeswork-sex-medicine/
Dr. David Healy
Dr. Healy has written extensively about PSSD and runs the website www.Rxisk.org. Dr. Healy received his training at Cambridge University.
“For over a decade there are reports that describe the link between SSRIs and sexual dysfunction that persist even after discontinuation of treatment. This severe syndrome may be due to a sufferer’s death. And ‘therefore necessary to understand the physiology and study of treatments.”
– Dr. Healy, Int J Risk Saf Med. , 2014
He writes more about PSSD here: http://rxisk.org/post-ssri-sexual-dysfunction-pssd/
Dr. Vincenzo Puppo
“The disorders of desire, arousal and orgasm are very common side effects of antidepressants, which may persist even after their suspension”
– La stampa, 03/07/2014
Dr. Robert P. Kaufmann
“It ‘s very likely that sexual dysfunction post-treatment, such as genital anesthesia, are not adequately reported. Physicians should be made aware of this unpleasant phenomenon. A formal post-treatment surveillance is absolutely justified.”
– The Open Womens Healt Journal , 12/2007
“In the recent peer-reviewed literature, three separate case reports have detailed sustained persistence of sexual dysfunction and genital anesthesia well after termination of SSRIs in the absence of residual psychopathology or another identifiable disorder. In each report, the annoying symptoms were absent prior to antidepressant therapy.”
– Primary Psychiatry, 11/25/07
Dr. Carlo Carangard
“SSRIs \ SNRI antidepressants are so effective in creating sexual dysfunction which are sometimes given as a treatment for premature ejaculation. However sometimes these sexual dysfunction can continue even after stopping the drug.”
– Psych Central , 05/2016
Researchers
(Read their work below)