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Talking point: Pelvic health
It’s time to start the conversation about pelvic health. It’s not just menopausal women who have challenges: young women and men can also experience issues they’re too embarrassed to discuss or seek help for, as Kath Hudson reports
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In the context of a strained NHS faced with record numbers of people on waiting lists, there is a growing awareness of the potential for the fitness industry to play a role in supporting people living with health conditions and pelvic health is a key area in which the fitness sector can make a big difference.
Pelvic health is particularly relevant to the fitness industry for two main reasons. Firstly, pelvic health issues stop people taking part in exercise and physical activity, particularly women, who we already know experience huge barriers to fitness.
New data from our Healthier Nation Index has found that the gender gap is continuing, with men reporting that their fitness levels have improved over the past year (38 per cent better versus 26 per cent worse), whereas women state their physical fitness has worsened (31 per cent better versus 33 per cent worse.) When speaking to my clients, fear of leaking is the most common worry.
Secondly, the fitness industry can make a huge difference in supporting people with pelvic health issues, as the right exercises targeting the pelvic floor can help both prevent and alleviate pelvic health symptoms.
Conversations about taboo subjects, like continence and pelvic pain, can be hard to start, but fitness professionals are naturally good at building trust and rapport, and with the right knowledge and skills, opening conversations around pelvic health will help to shape exercise programmes that can manage symptoms and allow them signpost to appropriate care when needed. It’s key to raise awareness about what the fitness industry can offer, ensuring that this support is of a high standard and working with partners to direct people to the right services.
Research shows that more than 50 per cent of women may have trouble contracting pelvic muscles correctly. If a client is struggling to feel these muscles working, they may need support from a specialist pelvic health physiotherapist alongside their fitness professional. Supporting someone’s pelvic health is never a one size fits all approach. As in all other areas, exercises should be tailored to the individual.
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The prevalence of pelvic health dysfunction is much more common than most people would think. The pelvic floor can affect squat depth, weight-lifting capability, agility and power production in the legs and torso, meaning clients are likely to experience reduced performance and further complications if issues aren’t addressed.
The current waiting times for pelvic health treatment on the NHS can range from six- to 18-months and often clients are limited to just four sessions. Although some people will need a more medical intervention, the vast majority of pelvic health issues can be identified by a pelvic health physiotherapist who could develop a plan for a PT to deliver, so this is an ideal opportunity for the health and fitness industry to support the NHS.
Both men and women suffer from pelvic health issues, but generally in different ways. Men are more likely to experience pelvic floor dysfunction due to tension and tightness in the pelvic floor, which can lead to pain, poor bladder control, constipation and erectile dysfunction.
Erectile dysfunction can be an early indication of heart disease, while increased bladder frequency can also indicate prostate cancer. Women typically suffer from weakness caused by lifestyle changes, such as pregnancy and menopause.
Normalising the problem is the key to success. The first step is to start with leaflets and posters in the gym, designed to highlight the common issues. Providers could then introduce pelvic health screening questions to their pre-exercise questionnaires for new members. Emailing the screening questions to existing clients will ensure no one is missed.
Screening new clients for pelvic health dysfunction is really important when it comes to managing their goal progression and long-term health and knowing when to refer them on to a pelvic health specialist is essential.
Current statistics suggest that 82 per cent of women will have children and 50 per cent will experience a prolapse at some point.
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This is not a trend, it’s a serious gig which we need to tackle properly. The official figures are that 50 per cent of women over the age of 50 will have some stress incontinence. Pelvic floor dysfunction can result from a multitude of reasons, some are quite straightforward, but many are very complex and could involve medical trauma, or sexual abuse.
This is a specialist subject and the pelvic floor is a very private, intimate and vulnerable part of woman’s body, yet there is an important role for fitness professionals to play here. They need to be able to hold the space for a woman to say I’m struggling with this exercise and then to adapt the workout accordingly. They also need to be able to refer on to a specialist when it goes outside of their scope.
Women face three factors making them vulnerable to pelvic floor dysfunction. The vagina provides a gap for pressure to come in and out of; giving birth causes further issues, followed by the hormonal rollercoaster of the menopause. Many midlife women are mortified to find they wet themselves while exercising. This is because oestrogen levels drop and can be rectified by either taking HRT, or using a specific vagina oestrogen that can be obtained on prescription.
Many women feel they have to hide their problems, but we need them to exercise. My hope and belief is that by talking about pelvic floors, and adapting exercises, we can stop women feeling ashamed and isolated, help them with their issues and encourage them to be active. So many women I’ve trained can’t feel their pelvic floor. They’ve locked it, it’s dead to them, because they’re ashamed of it.
I’m currently running a project with The Gym Group, training their PTs in pelvic health, so they can deliver workshops.This is already having great results.
For example, one trainer shared that she noticed a woman leave her class because she was feeling faint. She found her after the session and the member said she hadn’t drunk much that day. The trainer dug a bit deeper, gently asking: “can you tell me a bit more about that? Why have you not had a drink today? Did you find the exercises a bit tricky?” Diplomatic language empowered the client to open up about her issues and gave the trainer the opportunity to help.
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Pelvic floor support is part of the NHS Long Term Plan’s commitment to improve the prevention, identification and treatment of pelvic floor dysfunction, so fewer women experience ongoing issues after giving birth and later in life. There is a huge opportunity for the physical activity sector to embrace this opportunity and become an integrated part of the delivery infrastructure.
Offering an alternative to a clinical environment, where people can access these services in community venues where they already feel comfortable, such as a leisure centre, a gym or a studio, is likely to reduce barriers and encourage more engagement, as well as relieving the pressure on more traditional NHS pathways and services.
Clubs and trainers already have the tools they need to support their clients’ pelvic health. First, it is important to know that all exercise helps. Second, exercises known to support pelvic health are ones that are commonly taught: many core exercises, squats and lunges are helpful, with some additional consideration and refinement paid to breathing patterns, imagery, sensations and cueing.
Fitness practices that are mat based and whole-body movement focused, such as Pilates, are excellent, as clients are provided with movements in all positions relative to gravity that train internal support of the spine, pelvis and legs. Pilates Reformer and studio training is particularly helpful, as the equipment is designed to assist the client when needed, as well as challenging and adding resistance in exercises that simulate real life movements.
Investing in educating and upskilling PTs and instructors would go a long way towards providing training that supports pelvic health, especially around breathing patterns, overload and isometric holds. The Pilates method includes these refinements, and can be learned and easily.
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A lot of women are embarrassed about this issue until someone like me – as a women’s health physio – comes along and shouts vagina in the middle of the room. We should treat pelvic health the same as other health issues or injuries, so the conversation needs to start with screening questionnaires for new members.
When we know women have symptoms, we can help them by adapting training, including some pelvic floor training, or signposting them to a physio. Partnering with a women’s health physio to run quarterly workshops, or beginner classes, would take pelvic health to a new level.
It’s important to maintain pelvic health with exercises from a young age. Some younger women who participate in high-impact sports, such as gymnastics or trampolining, can experience issues such as leakage and an overactive pelvic floor, where the muscles are working too hard because of the intra-abdominal pressures required during their sport. Pelvic health physiotherapy can help.
There are many misconceptions, for example that if a woman has a prolapse, they can’t lift weights, but there’s research to show that’s incorrect. Exercise and strength training are vital components of rehabilitation and long-term management of prolapse and prolapse symptoms.
We have to enforce the point that women can exercise, while also supporting the prolapse, by adapting the exercise and ensuring they breathe out during the exertion to reduce intra-abdominal pressure.
Sixty per cent of women have a pelvic floor issue and more than 53 per cent have never sought help, not knowing that leakage when sneezing could be stopped. There’s so much PTs could do within their scope of practice and there are women’s health physios, like me, who want to work with the fitness sector to raise the awareness of pelvic health and stop women from suffering in silence.
Sarah Thorne is a women’s pelvic health physiotherapist and PT
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• Do you leak when you cough, sneeze, laugh or run?
• Do you always make it to the toilet in time, or is there an urgency when emptying your bladder or bowel?
• Do you wake up at night to empty your bladder?
• Do you have persistent constipation or struggle to empty your bowel?
• Do you have persistent pain around your pelvis (abdomen, groin, buttocks or genitals?)
• Do you have pain with sex or erectile issues?
• Don’t include star jumps, high knees or tuck jumps in the warm-up
• Use the inclusive language of yoga, for example “If star jumps are not available to you today…"
• When giving modifications still make your clients work, for example side lunges with weights
• It’s important not to hold the breath when lifting because that puts more pressure on the pelvic floor, so educate your clients to exhale during the effort, as though they’re deflating a balloon
• Go gently with conversations: if they feel comfortable they will share and if they don’t, back off
• Find a pelvic floor physiotherapist to refer to, or direct clients to the POGP register
• Physios want to work with the fitness industry, so invite them in to run a workshop. Both The Well HQ and Sarah Thorne run courses and workshops on pelvic health
• Everyone should be doing at least one set of pelvic floor exercises a day. If they don’t work they need to see a specialist. Apps are available to support, including PelviFit and the NHS Squeezy app
• Being constipated puts additional strain on the pelvic floor, so educate your clients to look after their nutrition to make sure this isn’t an issue