Sex With Emily - Hot Sex with STIs w/ Dr. Ina Park
Episode Date: April 9, 2021Fact: Your STI doesn’t make you ANY less sexy! In today's episode, I’m joined by the author of Strange Bedfellows and medical consultant, Dr. Ina Park who has made it her life's work to reduce the... shame and stigma associated with sexually transmitted infections, AKA, STIs. Ina shares everything you need to know if you or someone you’re sleeping with is infected, how to reduce your risk of transmission, and when to disclose your status to a partner.We also discuss Ina’s #1 tip for STI prevention, what to know about how your personal grooming can impact transmission and a surprising discovery about The Bachelor’s casting process. Finally, we answer your questions about transmission through oral sex, when it’s possible to get intimate without a condom and why having an STI isn’t a death sentence for your relationships. Let’s ditch the shame and bring on the sex.For more information about Dr. Ina Park, visit: inapark.netFor even more sex advice, tips, and tricks visit sexwithemily.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
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So that's what I'm about here. Like maximized pleasure, minimized regret, have sex with kind people.
Look into his eyes. They're the eyes of a man obsessed by sex. Eyes that mark our sacred institutions, Bedroom eyes they call them in a fight on days.
You're listening to Sex with Emily.
I'm Dr. Emily and I'm here to help you prioritize your pleasure and
liberate the conversation around sex.
Just when you thought herpes wasn't sexy,
in today's episode I'm joined by the author of Strange Bed Fellows,
Dr. Aina Park, who
has made her life's work to reduce the shame and stigma associated with STIs, sexually
transmitted infections, or STDs.
Aina shares everything you need to know of you or someone you're sleeping with is infected,
how to reduce your risk of transmission, and when to disclose your status to a partner.
We reveal a surprising discovery about the Bachelor, what to know about grouping your pubic
hair, take note, and her number one tip about prevention.
We got so many questions from you and we got into a lot of them.
Is it possible to catch an STI through oral sex when it's possible to get intimate without a condom and why having an STI
isn't a death sentence for your relationship
or your sex life.
Dr. Anapark talks about STIs in a way
that I think is gonna make you all breathe a sigh
of relief.
She is the expert.
She's been studying it for years.
She's the medical director
of the California Prevention Training Center years. She's the medical director of the California
Prevention Training Center. And she's also the medical consultant for the Division of
SDD Prevention at the CDC. And today we're talking about her new book. Okay, I have an announcement.
I'm so excited because I am doing a live virtual podcast next week, April 15th. You're
just a page of taxes. I know you're going to want to join me for a fun show with it.
Six o'clock Pacific, it is going to be a blast.
I get to answer your questions live during the show.
We're going to be doing giveaways, do surveys and polls and kind of
vote what we're going to talk about.
And some of you, we called up to ask me a question right there in the spot.
It's $10 to view the live podcast experience or you can pay $100 and get a one-on-one live
meet and greet with me and you get to keep the video of it.
I'm going to answer all your questions.
We're going to have fun to find more information.
Go to looptlive.com.
That's L-O-O-P-E-D live.com.
Just go to upcoming experiences and scroll down.
All right, intentions with Emily, you know, this is what we do. We said intention for each episode.
I do it. I encourage you to do it. So when you're listening, what do you want to get out of the episode?
Well, my intention was to have the foremost expert on the show to answer all your questions about STDs, STIs
to give you the risks and truths to army with knowledge so you can enjoy your sex life even more.
All right, enjoy the show. [♪ your new book, Strange Bed Fellows,
Adventures in the Science, History and Surprising Secrets of STDs,
I was thrilled when we got introduced.
I'm like, we have to get around the show.
So tell me about yourself and then why you decided to write this book.
So I've been in the sort of sexual health space,
you know, since my college days and I started off as a peer educator
at UC Berkeley, and I would, you know,
traips around to like fraternity houses and dorms
with like a dildo and basket of condoms
and do my live demos, and it was actually something
that I did actually as a peer educator
was also dressed up as a giant condom
and do these live demos in front of like 100 people
at Sproul Hall and Berkeley. And I wrote about that for my medical school admissions
essay, believe it or not, and they let me in any way at UCLA. So I love it. You know, once I got
there, I actually became much more interested in HPV. I actually got HPV as my first STI that I'm
aware of and got more interested in studying it because I knew of its link to cervical cancer
and anal cancer and understood that cancers of the general tract are still kind of taboo. So I actually got more
into the research area and HPV. So now I've been in this, you know, space now moving out of
sexual health specifically and more into STI research. And I consult now for the CDC and then I'm a
associate professor at the school of medicine over at UCSF. Okay. You are the person.
And then tell us about the story about writing the book about your son.
Yeah.
Could you just tell that story because I first I think we're like kindergarten spirits.
We have so many similarities in art like you carry around the dildos and the places I bring
dildos to.
You can't believe.
But yeah, I would love to.
Yeah.
If you could just share the story about your your aha moment that this has to be a book.
I've been in the field for like eight years and all I saw every year were that STIs were getting worse
and I was thinking to myself Emily what can I do? I don't want to change the way people have sex
and I can't go into everyone's bedroom and say wait wait like let me put a barrier on you know
before you do anything and so what I might be able to do is actually work on reducing the stigma around these and a way to do that is maybe to
start writing about it and increase the conversation around the topic. And if I could do it through humor and storytelling, maybe I could turn people
more towards the topic in fascination and wonder instead of what we are right now with, you know, this sort of fear-based mentality. you say STI and the first reaction is like, oh, and oh my god, I don't want that.
Or I'm afraid of that.
And the things that we're afraid of we run away from.
So I would never have written a book at that time, Emily.
Worst timing ever.
But my son actually got hit by a car.
So for the parents out there, he's fine.
In the hospital, we were in the ICU
because he had a skull fracture and he broke his leg.
And the neurosurgeon came by and said, you know, how old are you?
What's your name?
Let's make sure his mental status is okay.
And my son answered those questions and then he said, wait a minute, have you ever had
herpes?
Because if you have, I want you to ask my mom about it.
She knows everything.
So his whole team, he's dying.
The whole team is laughing.
And so then my son during the hospital stay asked the orthopedic surgeon if he'd ever had syphilis.
He asked the chaplain whether or not he'd ever have a
chlamydia.
So I just looked at him and I said,
this kid is like taking a sexual history
on every single person he meets and he's totally fine with it.
And so maybe I could do something with this book
that could get people just a little bit more comfortable
talking about the topic.
If I can get my seven year old comfortable about it, maybe I could get other people along as well.
It's such a good story when I was reading. I'm glad your son's okay.
But I'm reading that story. It's true though. I just maybe think, this is the moment. I understand it.
Why you needed to write this book because it is a stigma. People think, oh, I get herpes. It's
like a death sentence. I can never have sex again. It's going to be this horrible thing. And you reminded me of this story when my niece was eight,
visiting me in San Francisco. I was going through grad school.
And I had like 300 literally sex books on the...
Yes.
And she stayed with me overnight.
And then in the morning, I dropped her off to him back to them.
And she said,
Mommy, why does every book on Aunt M's shelf have the word sex in the title?
And then she started reading the titles like Connelingus, like, lesbian, sex, she asking
all these questions at my sister.
I was not ready to ask.
I was not ready to answer.
I was not ready to answer.
Okay.
So why is there such a stigma?
Do you think it's like all this misinformation?
I mean, we hear this every single day.
We do.
And I think part of it is the fact that we don't have,
like, I'm just going to take her piece.
Let's pick on her piece for a second,
because I think it's the most agmatized of the infections.
And I think it's because we don't have great medication yet
that completely reduces your risk of transmitting to a partner.
The medicines we have are good, like,
they reduce the risk by about half.
But for some people, when people just close
an STI diagnosis, that that becomes a deal breaker in the relationship, which I feel like is
really unfortunate and really silly because we know that, you know, something like herpes,
it really just affects the skin. It's not going to cause like infertility. It's not going to cause
any like long-term health problems, but there is still this stigma surrounding the topic
because people are afraid to disclose.
And when you disclose and get rejected, then that just augments your fear and the feelings
of stigma even more.
So it's like this really bad perpetuating cycle that I am hoping with you to try to break
and get people more normalizing it and understanding that we all get STIs.
We do. We all get STIs. So what is the most common than is HPV, right?
Absolutely, yes, by far. And what I tell people, in my field, we always say HPV is the common
cold of the genitals. Every single person gets it. It's like a normal consequence of being
this actually active person. So I don't even want people to think about it really as an STI anymore.
It's just something that happens when you have sex.
It's just that we know that there are risks obviously with HPV if left unchecked, you know,
for cervical cancer, anal cancer, and throat cancer.
So it's not like I want people to ignore it.
I want everyone to go out and get vaccinated if they're, you know, 45 or under.
But it's really a normal consequence of being a sexually active human being.
So let's just accept that you can't even really prevent it anywhere.
You can get the vaccine.
You can get the vaccine, but you know what?
And sometimes patients have come to me and they're like, oh my God,
though, I am perfect with condoms like I never do anything without a barrier
and I have HPV and I said, yes, like HPV is like glitter.
Emily, like it just goes everywhere. And you can only, you can't wear full body latex.
I mean, you could, but you know, and that's kind of kinky.
If you're into that, but you know what I'm talking about, like you can't cover everything,
and HPV literally goes everywhere, like if you have it in the cervix, it can easily go into the
anus because fluids go in there and people stick fingers and places and whatnot.
So I really want people to think about it as like,
I'm gonna get it and it's unavoidable.
We asked our insurgent,
I mean, we do you were coming on
and we asked for their questions.
So here's just the questions,
it just came at, does HPV ever go away?
Mm-hmm.
So I think the easier answer is to say yes.
I mean, for most people, like 80 to 90% of people who actually get an HPV infection will clear it after two years. So that would be like don't have sex for 20 years and then maybe something happens to their immune system.
They get HIV, they get cancer and they have to go in chemo or they get an organ transplant.
Their immune system gets knocked out and sometimes the HPV comes back, but that is very unusual and really for the most part what we tell people is once you get rid of it it's gone. Doesn't mean you can't get reinfected with you know there's over 200 types now actually classified
believe it or not. So can the guys still go down to me if I had tested HPV exposure but no symptoms?
Yes I think I know what she means so maybe her HPV test was positive like she got a cervical cancer
screening test or something and her HPV is positive. Yes, and I hope he goes down on you, please.
Absolutely.
What I would say is that for folks who are under 45, go get vaccinated because then you
just don't have to have any stress about this.
If she happens to be HPV positive and he goes down on her and he gets HPV in his throat,
most likely it's not going to do anything.
We know from Michael Douglas, for example, that in in rare circumstances people do go on to get cancers. So I don't tell people who test HPV positive because the test that we have usually just tell you you have one of 14 types.
They don't even tell you what type you have. So I just generally tell people keep going with your sex life. If you do have a pre-cancer though on your cervix, it's good for your partner.
If you have a stable partner to wear barriers because it actually helps your body clear it,
if you're not ping-ponging the infection back and forth.
Okay.
So what about the cancers though?
If we want to talk about the cancers and anal cancer and how we have a lot of people
like Michael Douglas and Marsha Cross, who they've come out talking about this.
So what do we need to know?
Yeah. I mean, I think, as I I mentioned like everybody for the most part clears HPV
But then there are those few people who have a persistent HPV infection
And if it's with one of those types like the really bad actors, which are like type 16 and 18
Which are by the way, both are bad actors like they're bad actors. Oh, no, they're great actors
They're great actors. They're like great great actors. And what do you like about Michael Douglas? No, they're both great actors. These
HPV types are the bad actors. And both of them are covered by the vaccine. But if you get one of those,
and it just sits there for years and years, it slowly starts to cause a pre-cancer. And then
if left unchecked, that can cause cancer. So,ha Cross is one of the few people. I'm sure that there
have been other people who've had anal cancer who, you know,
are celebrities, but she's been so great in coming out and being
vocal and open about it because there is some taboo, you know,
what I mean around genital and anal cancers and she's like this
enthusiastic anal cheerleader and it's amazing. I, you know, I
love that she's doing that. I think it's helping destigmatize HPV in general.
Absolutely.
So how likely is it that you can get an STI through oral sex?
I came of age and the HIV AIDS era.
And we always thought about oral sex as safer sex, right?
And it is from an HIV perspective.
It's really unlikely to get HIV through oral sex.
And I would say basically near impossible.
But things like syphilis, gonorrhea,
chlamydia to some extent can absolutely be contracted
through oral sex and herpes, HSD.
And you absolutely can get HPV easily in the throat as well.
So oral sex is really only safer from an HIV standpoint.
And for everything else,
it's absolutely possible to give and, you know, receive oral sex and get an STI that way.
How can we prevent that, though? What do we look for? Someone's not having an outbreak.
You're like, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for
a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a,
for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a
a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a,
a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a, for a HSV. People just might know it was Herpes,
but there's HSV one and two.
So HSV two or Herpes Simplex virus two is the one
that causes the genital Herpes recurrences
when for people who are living with HSV,
who are getting outbreaks from time to time.
That's caused by that virus.
And then of course, there's so many people out there
who've had a cold sore on their mouth, right? And that's caused by HSV1. And if you go down on somebody like when you're about to
have a cold sore outbreak or if you have a cold sore, then you can pass that HSV1 to your partners,
genitals or anus, depending on what you're into sexually. So, and then that person could have an
outbreak of that HSV1 in their genitals, but the good thing about HSV1
is that most of the time people have one outbreak
and then it doesn't usually bother them again.
So if you're gonna get one type,
people prefer to get HSV1
because it usually does not end up causing recurrent problems.
Right, so it's the HSV2 that is gousing recurrent problems.
People could have both, too, right?
You could have HSV1.
You can have both.
Yes, you can absolutely have both.
But one of the things I talk about in the book,
there's like the scene where I kiss my son on the mouth,
and I'm like, oh, I hope you get oral herpes for me,
because it'll hopefully be in the best interest of your penis
later in life, which is that people who've already been exposed
to HSV1, if they get exposed to
HSV2, they're like way less likely to have a recognized outbreak with a lot of pain
or whatever.
If people don't have any antibodies to any herpes, simplex virus, when they first go out
and start having sex, if they get exposed, you can have a really crazy severe outbreak.
And I've seen that.
Of course, you're going to recover.
That's happening to you right now as you're listening.
You're absolutely going to recover.
But people that don't have any antibodies
tend to have like a more severe response.
Well, I love that part of your book
because I can so picture you like in San Francisco.
I think said you were in Noi Valley with your family
live.
And you're like, yeah, the moms with their Hannah sanitizer
and the kid wad up and they're washing their hands. And you were just like, come kiss me on the mouth. Like you were
a thermophobic. Right. Then a lot of them moms. So what's going to happen right now though? I was
thinking about this during COVID now. We're all safe. We were using hand sanitizer. We're going to
be more susceptible to infections. Well, first of all, like my sort of generation of moms,
not me,
and lots of actually lots of public health
and infectious disease people I work with are not germophobic,
but lots of moms in my generation are germophobic
and they're disinfecting everything
and sanitizing everything.
And now with COVID, oh my God, it's gonna be,
it's escalated for good reasons, right?
But if you don't get exposed to lots of germs when you're young,
it actually sets you up sometimes for worse infections as an adult and more allergies, they think. So,
it's interesting that some folks say like it's good to be exposed to worms and dirt, you know,
when you're a kid and you're actually less likely to get infections later. When we come back,
I asked Dr. Aina Park about what it really means if you have herpes and what it means for your sex life.
So going back to herpes HSV right now, you wrote this book because you really want everyone to be able to talk about
STDs, STIs like your son did at seven years old without
shame, asking the doctor if he's had chlamydia.
And that's what I want.
My mission is to get people to talk about sex like they're talking about the weather.
Yes.
And I know you do this very well in your book, Strange Bed Fellows, but how do we get people
to realize that if you have herpes, you can still have a healthy sex life.
Well, it's really hard and I want to like identify and empathize with your listeners
who are living with HSV who are feeling like, oh my God, am I going to be able to have pleasure
and joy in my sex life again?
I mean, I'm here to tell you because I've seen people from the minute they've gotten diagnosed
and I've seen people who've been living up with it for 20 years and it totally, it gets
better.
That's number one.
It absolutely gets better.
Your outbreaks become less and less frequent.
And then you also develop your little mini TED talk
that you have to get, you know,
that you give to partners to disclose.
Also, I think we're gonna keep working on medications
as well as there's a bunch of work on vaccines
for people who are actually living with herpes.
There are people who are working on therapeutic vaccines
to actually even after you have the virus to help reduce the number of outbreaks and reduce your shedding.
So I think eventually we're going to get to a place where we just say it's just another
skin infection.
It's just like HPV.
It's really not a big deal.
We're not quite there yet, Emily.
And it's because we don't have good enough medication so that someone can, you know, say
to their partner, I have no risk of transmitting
this to you. Even with a daily suppressant, you still could transfer it. Yes, I mean, it's very,
you know, the thing is, let's think about this. Like, after someone gets HSV2 and they're living with
it for a couple of years, they're really only shedding any virus on like 10% of the days out of the
year. And then if you take the suppressants every day,
you're reducing your risk of transmitting by half.
So, you know, the risk of you actually catching HSC
from somebody who knows their status
and is taking their meds every day,
is actually really not very high.
The person you're gonna get HSC from
is the person who doesn't know their status
and is just like having sex, willy-nilly, right?
So it's really the people that know their status that you want to sleep with those people
because they are doing something to control it.
And everybody else doesn't have any idea and they're walking around clueless.
Oh, God, it's such a, I hadn't even heard it flipped that way, but you're absolutely right.
If you are on top of it, right, you, and you know that you could surprise, you know,
because then also if you have it, you know when you're gonna get an outbreak,
or you could have feel it.
And you're gonna stop it, and you're like,
but right, otherwise, and somebody's like,
they maybe they're carrier, right?
And that whole notion of someone being a carrier
and never knowing that they have it.
I got DM today on Twitter by somebody who got infected
by somebody who was completely asymptomatic
and just didn't know their status.
And so now, of course, the person that got infected
is having severe and recurrent outbreaks.
And then there's people walking around who have HSV2, who never have an outbreak and never
have any problems.
So it's the same thing I say about HIV2, Emily, when someone knows their HIV status and
they're taking their meds every day, that is not the person you're going to get HIV from.
You're going to get HIV from the person who doesn't know their status and has really high levels of virus around.
So that's the thing that's so weird about HSV2 is that the
people who actually are on top of it and dealing with it
are probably not going to be that likely to transmit it.
I want everybody to hear this right now.
Because what is the percentage right now of people who do it?
I know that you say in your book,
Strange Bed Fellows at the number is dropping
from people who are contracting HSV2.
But in general, would you say,
because I think that's the one
that people are most worried about,
because a lot of people are...
Yeah, I mean, at the height of it all,
it was one in five Americans had HSV2.
And now it's about one in eight.
But if we think about how big our country is,
that's still a ton of people. It's like 50 million people have it. I mean, barriers
are helpful. But again, like HSV, especially you can get outbreaks around the anal area.
You can get outbreaks on your vulva. So, you know, you can't cover those with a barrier.
So I say what people are going out and having sex, they just need to understand that comes
with the territory and it could happen. And if somebody discloses their status to you, you know, say thank you for
telling me. And in your mind, I want you to hear our voices saying, this person is on top of it
and I'm not likely actually to get HSV from them. Yeah, exactly. Oh God. I just want that to be a meme
or so. I want you to go. I want you to send that to everyone because I hear it all the time so here's some questions of says someone else said I would if I diagnosed with her be 16 years ago and haven't had an outbreak in eight years
How contagious is it? I mean, I think her risk of transmission is really low. I mean if she really wants to do and like a great insurance policy
Because the thing is is the issue is it's like the shedding happens,
and it's sort of imperceptible.
When animal shed, no one has any idea,
it's happening silently, all you see
is the hair on the ground, right?
And it's the same thing with viral shedding,
no idea that it's happening,
so even though she hasn't ended out,
break for eight years,
there probably, you know, a handful of days
out of the year that she is shedding.
If she wants to put a super strong,
like insurance policy on it, other than saying, I haven't had anything for eight years she could take suppression
every day and then then again she's really unlikely to transmit it. Okay and then can I get her
beast from someone who has no symptoms? Absolutely. Most people do that's that's the time most
people actually get her beast because people who are are not jerks, when they have an outbreak avoid sleeping with people
if they know that they're getting married.
What if both people have HSV?
Like is it better, like if you have HSV2
and your partner has it?
Yeah, no biggie.
Then you're just going back and forth, right?
Yeah, I mean, you can't get it again.
So once you have it, if you get exposed again,
you already have the antibodies in your blood.
I mean, it's a question I get asked a lot is, well, what if they give me like with HIV,
there are, you know, slightly different variations in types, but people with HSV, the thought
is, like if this person has, my partner has it and I have it, they're not going to be
able to give me a second type of herpes.
And it's not going to worsen the outbreaks or the frequency that I already have.
Okay. That's good to know. And then, okay, maybe you have some, I've talked about this in this show,
but how do you tell a partner you are HSV positive without killing the mood?
Yeah, I mean, I would say that conversation should be had when clothes are still on,
and not when like someone's about to go down on you.
You know what I mean?
That's right.
Probably not the moment.
The timing is really important with that.
Like I think if you've already gotten hot and heavy
and you're already halfway nude or whatever,
that's a really hard time.
Cause it requires thinking and calculation
on the part of the other person, you know?
Which is why some people just don't do it Emily.
Yeah, exactly.
I say outside the bedroom,
when you know you're gonna have sex with someone,
when you know that you are going to beforehand,
Hey, let's talk about our status.
Yeah, and I think everyone thinks when they first get diagnosed, they think that every partner is going to freak out,
and I just have to tell you it's been really interesting like talking to people who are living with her piece.
Some people just kind of shrug and say, okay, like it's not like some people really don't think it's a big deal, and
and then some people do need to like know a lot more.
And I've actually talked to couples
who are like thinking about having sex
and like one of them wants, you know, some reassurance
and you know, to talk to me before they actually go for it.
And so it's just, you know, people think my sex life
is over and every partner is gonna freak out
and it's not true.
Right, not at all.
I think your book Strange Bad Those
is changing the stigma.
You've already changed the stigma.
So how about warts?
No.
You're gonna hear about it.
You've a whole book chapter on warts, warts and all.
And we have a question that says, how to get creative when a sexual partner has general
warts.
So should we just talk about warts for a minute?
You know, warts are caused by HPV 6 and 11.
Those are also in the vaccine, by the way.
So if you get the vaccine, you're very unlikely to get worth.
And the good thing, the silver lining about getting
worth is that those types of HPV will not cause cancer.
They never cause cancer.
What I tell people who are actively having an outbreak of
worth is like, tell your partner, if it's on your penis,
like wear a barrier, you know what I mean?
You don't have to stop having sex altogether because you
happen to have a work.
But I think when you know that you happen to have a work, but I think
when you know that you actively have HPV there and that those words shed a ton of virus,
it's a good idea to tell partners what's going on.
But you don't absolutely have to stop doing it.
And if someone, like, were to go down on you and notice that there's a work there, this
has definitely happened to folks that I know HPV might go into your throat,
but that's not gonna cause any kind of cancer at all.
It's not gonna cause any problems.
Okay, so how do we know though, like,
what are you looking for?
If you're like, well, maybe they don't know,
but you see a bump, how would you explain
what people should look for?
Do you have any like tips of the trade?
They can look just like little bumps
and they can look like little cauliflower's or broccoli's,
you know what I mean?
On a stock, sorry to use a food analogy in the rewards,
but sometimes people don't like to know
that they're being examined by their partner,
you know what I mean?
So you gotta be kind of still about it
if you're gonna do a quick work check on the person
before you do anything with them.
But yeah, sometimes they just look like little bumps,
but most of the time they have a little texture to them,
Emily, little tiny bumps or areas that look kind of rough, like a little cauliflower.
Okay.
What is surprised you, because you were already working in this field for so long, you're
ready.
So did anything surprise you, because you were really into depth, I mean, you get into HIV,
you get into war.
It's like we said pubic hair, which we'll get into in a minute.
Was there anything that, you know, when you write the book and you sit down and do it,
what was some new insights that?
Yeah, one of the things that I thought was so fascinating was about the bachelor, believe
it or not.
So I don't know if you taught you, I haven't talked about the bachelor.
No, but I want to talk a little bit.
Tell me out.
Yeah.
The bachelor's been in the news a lot, right?
There's been lots of controversies right now about that show, but one thing I thought
was super interesting was they actually screen all the potential bachelor's for HSB 2 and they use this test that is really inaccurate.
And if you actually screen positive on that test, they don't let you participate on the
show.
Some, you know, producer like comes up to you and says, by the way, you have herpes and
like, you can't be on the show.
And the problem is is that these tests that we actually have
They have these like different levels of positive so there's low positive and high positive if you have a low positive test
It's accurate like 50% of the time 50% of them are false positives
So there being these women are being told that they have a lifelong
Potentially STI and the test is wrong. So what I said in that chapter was, like ladies go get a confirmation
and then go back and get that rose, you know,
because, right.
We are like denying people the ability
to have true love on TV
because of this test that's giving false positive results.
And most of the tests are, right?
The Herpes test, the HSV test,
there's not a great test unless you have an outbreak, right?
There's not a good... Right, if you're having an outbreak, the tests are amazing. They're really similar to
the tests that we're using for COVID. So there are these PCR tests, the ones that use
it crime scene. So they amplify genetic material. They're super accurate. So if you have anything
like wrong with your genitals and they swab it and they say it's HSV, you can believe that.
But these blood tests are terrible. And we need to have better ones.
Now a lot of the labs that are actually offering a confirmation test, if that first test is positive,
just like we do for HIV, you know what I mean? Like you run one test, and then you run a second test
to make sure that it's accurate. For a long time though, many labs just did one test, and
we were giving out lots of false positive results. Oh my God. Really?
Everyone go get tested again.
This is another public service announcement.
Poor rejected bachelor ads.
Maybe it was doing them a favor though.
I know.
Not fan bachelor.
Who knows?
But also, let's talk about your chapter on pubicare, Bushwacked.
Because it is a trend.
I always think, oh, is the Bush going to come back?
Because it seems like this has been going on since the early odds.
Yep. Exactly. I'm ever hearing about Brazilian waxing bush gonna come back? Cause it seems like this has been going on since like the early odds. Yep, exactly.
I'm overhearing about Brazilian waxing
and I went and did it, I got into it
and now maybe it's coming back a little bit.
Can we just talk about the purpose of pubic care
and what's how it relates to STI's?
For this chapter, I had just like,
I started thinking about it because I just noticed like,
oh my God, I haven't seen pubic care.
It's such a long time.
Like all my patients decided pubic care was the enemy.
And I don't know why that was.
And then I said, I wonder what this might be doing
in terms of possibly creating risk of STIs
because sometimes when you wax or shave,
you can cause a little trauma to the skin.
And I actually had a patient who came in,
he had a little wort, a couple little worts,
they got frozen off.
And then of course, he thought he was going to have sex that night on a date, so he shaved
super fast and dry.
And then he came back and the HPV had gotten into all those little micro traumas and he
had like 50 worts after that.
So I was like, okay, what is going on here?
So yeah, I mean, I'm not saying that people care.
That just has like, I'm like, I mean, it's on here? So yeah, I mean, I'm not saying that people care. That just says like, I'm like,
I mean, this poor guy, I mean, total nightmare.
And he didn't even get laid.
Was it worth it?
Oh my God.
It was not worth it.
So yeah, so the thing is,
I don't know that pubic care serves a purpose
other than maybe it provides like a little bit
of reduction of the friction, right?
That you might get when you're rubbing just seeing
against skin, but I do have to say like after having my first and last Brazilian for
this book, I had tons of tiny little areas that were bleeding and little micro tears or
whatever that are entry points for viruses, especially like curfews or HPB. So it's just
something for people to be aware of. Like I don't actually tell people not to take out their hair.
I say, you do you, but if you're going to shave, which a lot of people do, because, you know, like a Brazilian
requires like an appointment and like dealing, right? But if you're going to shave the
pubic care researchers that I interview here say, do it like in the morning, if you think you're
going to go out that night. So give your skin like that six to seven hours to start healing before you expose yourself to, you know, someone
else's, you know, skin. Good advice. We get a lot of questions about this. What do I do
at the bumps and how do I take care of it? And what are the best practices that you've
learned? The thing that I do talk about because he studied this as well is that, you know,
men who have sex with men also are not just shaving the front, but they're also often shaving the anal area.
And so they're actually more likely to get injuries as well, because the gymnastics is
complicated.
Are you doing exactly right?
How do you get your leg over that?
Not easy.
It's not easy.
But yes, anyways, there are a couple studies in there that we talk about.
I always talk about a study through a story of possible, but that people who
are taking it all off, like, you know, 12 or more times a year, they're more likely it
looks like to get STIs and it's probably related to the trauma or maybe they're also just
having more sex and that's why they're taking off all their hair all the time.
Yeah, exactly.
Well, let's talk about speaking of having lots of sex.
Let's talk about that notion that people think that the more sex partners
You have and you get an STD that it means something about you that it says something about you and how
Yeah, and way this goes back to what we were taught
I think we were growing up that like
STDs are sort of some punishment or something for doing something wrong, right?
There's that whole mentality that we have and I tell a story in this chapter about two patients
that I saw and one had had 25 partners in three months.
He was a gay man and he was mostly having really short
relationships.
Some of them were just like one time only,
some of them were just like, you know, a couple weeks.
And then I had another person who I saw who only had two
partners, but he was going back and forth and having sex with one.
And then in a short time, he was driving back and forth
from Las Vegas to California, having sex with another one,
going back and having sex with,
so he was having concurrent relationships
that were overlapping.
And the person who only had two partners
had had like four STIs in the course of a very short course
of time.
And then the person who had 25 partners had nothing.
And so really the absolute number of people is not what actually increases your risk of
STIs.
Like, of course, you know, 25 is probably higher risk than one.
But my point is, is that if you are in a network of people where there's really just not that
much, you know much infection or people
are super on top of it and testing regularly, you're just not that likely to get an STI even
with lots of sex partners.
Yeah.
So what does increase your risk?
Is there anything you could say this will increase your risk of STIs?
Yes.
If your partner has other partners at the same time that they're having sex with you.
So if you know or you suspect, if well, if you haven't a negotiated,
like non-monogamous relationship and open relationship,
it's, you know, that's all good.
But sometimes the relationship is open on one end
and the other person, you know, has not agreed to it.
So if you think that that's going on,
that's a situation where you might catch something
because having the relationships that overlap
where people are going back and forth between partners, that is actually much higher risk than somebody who has partners and
then stops and then goes to another partner, has a relationship stops and goes to the next
partner, especially if you test in between.
So yeah, if you're partners, other partners, you need to be more on top of it in terms
of getting STI testing regularly.
That also reminds you a question about vaginas.
What about people who have repeated bacterial vaginosis, or they get a lot of UTIs or bladder
infections?
Can you talk about why some vulva owners might be at risk of having more than others?
And then the second part of that question, I don't want to ask, because I have so many
questions.
The second part of the question I don't want to forget to ask is about this notion that
if you get an SCD or an STI, it's because you're part of cheated and that might not be
a single people.
Yeah.
So, but let's cover it.
Let's talk about vaginas for a minute.
Yes, let's talk about vaginas.
So, like I have a whole chapter on the vaginal microbiome and we talk about BV and it's called
the Garden of Good and Evil.
And what I talk about there is that vaginas are really similar to people.
Some people fall apart when a small stress happens to them.
Some people can have like all these terrible things happen
and they're just a cool and calm and vaginas are like that too.
Some people's vaginas are super resilient like they...
You know, like people
do use with all kinds of chemicals and stuff, but their vagina doesn't cause the many problems
or they use lots of different kinds of loops, you know, they're having their period.
Like so many things can actually throw off vaginal pH, including, or, you know, people
have semen inside of them, if like their partner comes inside of them, back and throw a vaginal pH.
So for some people, you can throw anything
at their vagina and nothing happens,
but other people literally every single time
they get their period and that blood,
which is a higher pH than the pH of the vagina,
every single time they get their period, they get BV.
I mean, so literally some people's vaginas are on the edge. And people learn that
about themselves after a while. They're like, you know what? You're going to throw me off the edge,
you need to wear a condom, you know, until I know that I want to go there. Because some people deal,
you know, which you may have heard from listeners, like with chronic problems, or recurrent problems
with their vagina, because they get thrown off balance so easily.
But I want to tell folks that there is a really cool medication that just went through like
the second stage of clinical trials that looks really promising.
And it was just published in the New England Journal of Medicine, which is a super prominent
healthcare journal, but it's called Lactin V and it's based on lactobacillus, which is
the bacteria that we actually want in our vaginas all the time.
Because when it's there, your pH is okay, and it helps you handle like insults to the environment.
You know what I mean? If you have lots of lactobacillus around, when your lactobacillus die off, that's when you start getting, you know, things like the odor and the discharge of VV.
Is it a daily pill or a pill that you take?
It's gonna be a suppository.
Okay, so it's like a recurring suppository
that you're just to make sure that you have the right,
okay, that's so interesting.
So there are things coming, you know what I mean?
That are gonna help.
Because right now, right now,
what we do is we give people antibiotics.
Right.
And that helps, we give us something called
flageol or whatever.
And then some people got a yeast infection
after they take that, then they're like vagina
than another spiral of badness, you know?
It's really, I wish we had more.
Are there any commonalities between the vaginas
that happen to get more infections?
Are you chisers just like luck at the draw,
how you were born, your DNA?
Like what makes a certain vagina more susceptible
to infection and other ones not so much?
I don't have like a common pattern, like I wish I could say there was something
in diet that you control to make your vagina more resilient.
I mean, I will say that we know that semen
really throws things off.
So if you have a delicate vagina,
semen will just make things go crazy.
Dushing we know can make it worse.
So there's ways you can make it worse,
but I don't have a great way to make your vagina more resilient, right? If I did that would be awesome
If my god, can you imagine no because I know for example when I would have new sex partners
I usually would get something yeah
But if like it was new semen. It was new. Yeah, that's right. It's like a whole new microbiome
You know like we we know that you have a microbiome in the vagina
of bacteria that normally live there.
And then when people are together for a long time,
then people share bacteria with each other.
And it's all good.
When you get a new person, the inside of the penis
and the outside of the penis have their own bacteria.
And sometimes your body's like, whoa, what the heck is this?
And you have to get used to that person.
And then for a while, things can feel maybe not frankly, you know, like into the BV realm, but things can feel a little off
or you're like, this is not my normal state, and then sometimes, you know, you will equilibrate
and get back to, you know, you're normal. And you're in air tract infections and BV, they're not
going to go away, right? Like, you have to get them treated. Don't they just kind of stay with you for a long time?
Well, so like a UTI, a UTI, some people, you know,
that whole sort of thing about flushing it out
with water cranberry juice or whatever,
you can, if you have an early UTI
and you just hit it super hard with the fluids,
you can, you know, it doesn't always become like a full blown
infection with BV, same thing.
It thinks start to get out of whack
and let's say then you don't get exposed to that semen,
and things can die down before it fully,
it becomes malotorous and with lots of discharge.
If you've already gotten to that point where you're like,
wow, I have a lot of discharge and things do not smell right,
usually you need to take something to get it back on track.
And then sometimes you just don't know either.
Right.
You're sometimes you don't know if you've bevee or you don't know it.
And so that's why I always say if you're with a vulva, your partner is has a vulva and
you notice that it's changed.
Yes.
There's an odor or something.
Yes.
I think that we're also nervous to say something, but I think saying I care about you and
I've noticed that there's been a change you might want to go to your gynecologist and
get checked out.
That's a beautiful way.
Yeah, that's a totally beautiful way to say it. That's not shaming at all to the person.
As opposed to, I have had people who are like cis women
who their partner has complained.
The way they framed it was like,
this doesn't smell right,
or they just made them feel bad about it.
And you can say it just to say like,
hey, this is different.
Exactly. Just be honest. You're loving and it just to say like, hey, this is different. Exactly.
Yeah.
Just be honest.
You're loving and be loving.
Be like, I care about you.
And this isn't easy.
It's gonna be awkward.
I want to continue to go down on you.
I want to continue to ask you something's off.
You can get a check out.
That's beautiful.
I love this.
Thank you.
All right, I'm gonna take a quick break,
but when I come back,
Sophie asks whether she should have
unprotected sex with her boyfriend or not.
Okay, so maybe we'll get to another an email question we have. This is from Sophie and she asks, this is a longer one.
And she says, I've been dating my boyfriend for a year.
We first got together.
He disclosed his general herpes.
He was diagnosed a year before we got together.
His head two outbreaks, both of the same time of the year each year.
He hasn't taken antiviral medication yet, but we've talked about him getting
a prescription for valve tracks so he can avoid a third outbreak.
Great. Since we're approaching that time a year again, not sure if that is
even how outbreaks work. We always work on them, but I'm curious.
If he starts taking valve tracks, what is the risk of transmission if we have sex without condoms?
Since we've gotten much closer,
our relationships gotten stronger and more intimate
and I've been craving no condom sex.
And if we wanted to get pregnant one day,
how would we do that?
Yeah, I mean, so if he starts taking valtrex
like, you know, at least five days before
they're going to have condomless sex,
then that's the best he's gonna do in terms of, or you know, he can start a week before or two weeks before they're going to have condomless sex, then that's the best he's gonna do
in terms of, you know, he can start a week before
or two weeks before if he wants to,
but at least five days before would be great
in order to prevent an outbreak from happening
or to reduce, like if he's gonna have some shedding,
then it will reduce the amount of virus that's shedding,
so reduce the chance that she's gonna catch it.
Like I can't give you an exact percentage.
Okay. Because the thing is, is that I know he had an outbreak
that first year and that second year.
He might not have an outbreak at all this year,
because the first two years with genital herpes
are the worst.
And some people actually don't ever have outbreaks
after those first couple of years.
So I think it's nice if we know you're coming up
on that time as an insurance policy,
it's an awesome idea to take the Valtrix daily. It has very little side effects. I've had patients who've taken it for 10
years every day. So, you know, and it's really not a problem in terms of, you know, causing
any health issues. So, I think it's a good idea. And then I think they should go for it.
Okay. This is from anonymous 26th of Miami. How do I tell my boyfriend who's got a cold
sore that I don't want him to go down to me
until it's gone just in case he could spread it?
I don't want to hurt his feelings
because he loves going down to me and I love him too.
Oh, just be honest with him and just say,
okay, let's go back to your book
strange bedfellows on a park.
Let's not have any shame in this.
Let's not get so awkward.
I think you just say I am concerned.
It is scientifically proven that if you have a cold sore on your mouth, I could get it on my vagina. So let's just
wait a week.
Yeah. And the way to frame it, I think, which is nice is to say, I love having you go
down on me. It is so great. And I know from listening to Emily and Ina talk on sex
family, this could potentially give me a cold sore or a sore on my
vulva and I don't really want to go there. So let's just wait a week. Or she might already have
antibodies to HSV1. So she could also, I mean the tests are not great as we know, but if she goes
and she gets a high positive result, because they can draw your blood and test you for those antibodies,
if she already has those antibodies, then he can go down on her and she's not gonna have a problem
because she's already been exposed.
You know, there's a lot of people
caring around the antibodies for cold sores as well,
Emily, and they don't realize it.
So.
So glad you're here with me.
You're gonna have to come back because
we haven't even just scratched the surface.
We literally haven't.
Yeah, I want to just share like a tiny bit of advice
that I give at the end because
people are like, oh my god, how can I avoid getting STIs? And so my advice is you can't avoid
getting STIs. I mean, you can, like you can wear barriers. You can do that. But if you're going
to be a sexual person, you're probably going to get an STI. And so my advice in the end of the book,
I try to come up with like seven words. Like Michael Pollan's book, he says, eat food, not too much, and mostly plants, right? So I was like, I'm gonna do the same thing. I said,
have sex, not too much, and then I failed. So when I came up with my seven words, we're have sex
people that you like. Another way to say this is like, don't have sex with jerks, don't have sex with
assholes. You know what I mean? And that's because it doesn't protect you from getting an STI if you have
sex with people that you find something redeeming about. But getting an STI if you have sex with people
that you find something redeeming about.
But if an STI enters the picture, you're less likely to have a ton of regret.
Like when people say, like, I slept with this person, I don't remember anything because
I was so drunk or so high.
I don't remember their name.
Or I don't even like this person, but I just slept with them because I was lonely or whatever.
And an STI enters the picture.
That's when I've noticed that there's a lot more regret.
And so I can only protect you from regret and minimize regret.
So that's what I'm about here.
Like maximize pleasure, minimize regret.
That's what we can do.
So interesting.
I would say I would say have sex with people who are kind.
Or have sex with people.
Perfect.
Yes, have sex with kind people. Right. You know, life is too short to have sex with somebody who are kind. Or yes, that's the kind of people. Yes, have sex with kind people.
Right.
You know, life is too short to have sex with somebody
who you're like, this is not a nice person
and they don't really care about me
and the sex isn't even that good.
You don't even, you don't need that person.
You need to find somebody else.
Exactly.
I'm a park.
Thank you so much for being here.
I'm gonna ask you the five quickie questions we ask
all our guests and then we're gonna let people know
how they can find you.
OK, what is your biggest turn on?
Ooh, my biggest turn on.
You know, I just, my life, I have two kids.
And like, my life is so busy.
Like, there's no romance.
So like, you know, like in my husband, like,
buys me flowers.
Or like, does something super nice for me?
Like, suddenly, I'm like, oh my god, I feel aroused.
Like, that's, it's so weird. Like, someone does something nice for me, and that is what does it for me.
It's not like if you, you know, if he takes off his, you were like to take off his pants
and have an erection or whatever, I'd be like, yeah, but if you, like you said, oh, I cleaned out your car,
I'm like, wow, suddenly my clothes are coming off, you know what I mean?
Right. Biggest turn off. Oh, I don't like it if someone like sort of approaches me aggressively.
Like if we haven't like had some sort of agreement that we're having a little bit more of an
like aggressive play type of thing, I feel like I get intimidated or I want to retreat when someone
sort of comes at me too forcefully or with too much energy. What makes good sex?
Communication about like how it's going.
Move it over here, whatever, do this.
I think keeping communication going in the act actually makes it great.
Otherwise, you're like, oh, it's not totally working for me,
but you're afraid to say something.
I think those really satisfying times are when everybody's getting what they want.
Something you would tell your younger self about sex and relationships.
Oh my gosh, I would have said, have more sex with more people.
I had this sort of fear, you know,
before I became sort of more knowledgeable about stuff,
like I really limited my number of partners.
I was afraid to get HIV, a group in that time,
right, I was afraid to get HIV,
I was afraid to get STIs,
and now I would go back and tell myself, oh my God, definitely sleep with that person, oh, and sleep with that person too, and do that time right, I was afraid to get HIV, I was afraid to get STIs, and now I would go back
and tell myself, oh my God, definitely sleep
with that person, oh, and sleep with that person too,
and do that, three some, and do that,
like I just turned down a lot of fun opportunities
because I was too scared.
Yeah, I grew up that time too,
where it was just, it was a lot scarier.
Yeah.
What's the number one thing you wish everyone knew about sex?
Well, it's in the book, right?
Just that we're all gonna have it.
It's totally normal
and wonderful and a joyful part of life. And STI is sort of our part of the game and the cost of
doing business in the sexual marketplace. Let's get used to them because we're going to be living with
them for as long as we're having sex. I like it. Thank you so much. How can people find you? People can find me on my website, which is InaPARC, I-N-A-P-A-R-K dot net, and I'm on Twitter
at InaPARC MD.
And I am going to, like a couple people are twisting my arms.
I'm going to get on Instagram.
I just opened an account, InaPARC MD.
And I'm just going to be posting some short videos
that talk, just about like little educational videos.
I'm talking about some of the things we're talking about here.
Please tell us what we will tag you on this and then we will follow you and share your
videos. Absolutely.
Okay.
Great. Thank you for your book, Strange Bed Fellows. They can find your book wherever they
buy books.
Yes.
Exactly.
Whatever books are sold.
Yeah. Amazon, Barnes & Noble, bookshop.org, indie bound, like every book outlet has it.
So go ahead and check it out.
Thanks.
Well, thank you for making SDDs entertaining and insightful and less scary. Your book really does
that and it's a great read and I think it's really going to help level it so people realize they can
still have a healthy, happy life and sex life even if they get an STI or an STD. Exactly.
And we're all going to get one. We're're all gonna get one! It's not fun!
We're all good.
Just have sex with kind people.
Yes, exactly!
Thank you, Ina.
Appreciate you.
Thank you, Emily.
That's it for today's episode, see you on Tuesday.
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