Sexual health and vaginal symptoms: online GP support
Direct answer
Sexual health and vaginal symptoms can often start with a private GP discussion online, especially when you want to explain symptoms, ask about testing, or decide whether examination or local care is needed. Severe pain, bleeding, pregnancy concerns, infection red flags, or safety concerns need urgent or in-person care.
HerDoc may help with
- symptoms, timing, and severity
- pregnancy possibility, contraception, and STI risk questions
- pain, bleeding, discharge, urinary symptoms, or vaginal dryness
- medicines, allergies, and relevant history
Not suitable online
- severe pelvic pain
- heavy or unexplained bleeding
- pregnancy-related urgent symptoms
- fever, severe infection symptoms, assault, or immediate safety concerns
What happens next
Share relevant context before the consult so the GP can prepare. Information shared before or during intake is not a diagnosis, prescription, certificate, referral, or treatment decision.
Join waitlistHow HerDoc can help with sexual health and vaginal symptom telehealth
A HerDoc sexual health GP consult can be a practical first step for patients with private sexual health or vaginal symptom questions who want to talk through sexual health or vaginal symptoms. The consult is not an automatic pathway to a prescription, referral, certificate, test, or treatment. The GP reviews the information available and decides what is clinically appropriate.
Telehealth can lower the barrier to starting a sensitive conversation while still keeping clear safety limits. HerDoc aims to make the online pathway simple for patients and structured for doctors, while keeping safety limits clear. Website information is general information only and does not replace personalised medical advice from a GP.
- symptoms, timing, and severity
- pregnancy possibility, contraception, and STI risk questions
- pain, bleeding, discharge, urinary symptoms, or vaginal dryness
- medicines, allergies, and relevant history
What the GP assesses
The GP may ask about symptoms, timing, and severity, pregnancy possibility, contraception, and STI risk questions, pain, bleeding, discharge, urinary symptoms, or vaginal dryness, medicines, allergies, and relevant history. They may also ask about allergies, current medicines, pregnancy or breastfeeding where relevant, previous results, risk factors, and what has changed recently. This helps the GP decide whether telehealth is safe for the concern.
Assessment can lead to different outcomes. Advice, testing discussion, referral discussion, treatment-option discussion, follow-up planning, or in-person care guidance may be considered, but no specific outcome is guaranteed. If the concern needs examination, monitoring, or urgent local care, the GP may recommend another pathway.
- private initial discussion
- non-urgent symptom review
- testing or referral questions
- deciding whether examination is needed
What happens in the consult
Share relevant context before the consult so the GP can prepare. Information shared before or during intake is not a diagnosis, prescription, certificate, referral, or treatment decision.
Possible next steps may include general advice, follow-up planning, pathology discussion, referral discussion, certificate assessment, medication review discussion where relevant, in-person review, or urgent-care guidance. Specific outcomes are not guaranteed and depend on GP assessment.
Pre-consult information helps prepare the GP; clinical decisions are made during the real-time consult.
- Share relevant context before the consult
- Discuss the concern with the GP
- Follow the GP’s safety and next-step advice
Limits and safety
Some concerns should not wait for an online appointment. Telehealth may not be suitable for severe pelvic pain, heavy or unexplained bleeding, pregnancy-related urgent symptoms, fever, severe infection symptoms, assault, or immediate safety concerns. If symptoms are severe, sudden, rapidly worsening, or feel unsafe, call 000, attend an emergency department, or seek urgent local care.
A cautious online consult is sometimes most useful because it identifies that another pathway is safer. That can still be a helpful outcome: the GP can explain why online care is limited and what type of care may be more appropriate.
- severe pelvic pain
- heavy or unexplained bleeding
- pregnancy-related urgent symptoms
- fever, severe infection symptoms, assault, or immediate safety concerns
Costs, privacy and follow-up
Consult pricing starts from $40 AUD. Pharmacy, pathology, imaging, and external provider fees may be separate. Prices, availability, and external fees should be checked before booking because operational details can change and some services depend on location, provider availability, and clinical suitability.
HerDoc handles sensitive health information as part of providing care. The booking and consult pathway should feel private and clear, but patients should avoid sharing emergency concerns through routine website forms. If follow-up is needed, the GP may explain what to watch for, when to rebook, and when to seek local care.
- Consult pricing starts from $40 AUD
- External pharmacy, pathology, imaging, or specialist fees may be separate
- Wait times and availability can vary
- Follow-up depends on the GP assessment and the agreed care plan
When telehealth may not be suitable
- severe pelvic pain
- heavy or unexplained bleeding
- pregnancy-related urgent symptoms
- fever, severe infection symptoms, assault, or immediate safety concerns
When to seek urgent care
Call 000 or go to an emergency department for severe, sudden, rapidly worsening, or dangerous symptoms, including chest pain, stroke signs, severe breathing difficulty, fainting, severe bleeding, severe pain, suicidal thoughts, or immediate danger.
- severe pelvic pain
- heavy or unexplained bleeding
- pregnancy-related urgent symptoms
- fever, severe infection symptoms, assault, or immediate safety concerns
Want to know when HerDoc launches?
HerDoc is preparing to launch and is not taking appointments yet. Join the waitlist for booking availability updates.
Related pages
FAQs
When might vaginal symptoms need an in-person examination?
Severe pain, heavy or unexplained bleeding, pregnancy-related concerns, fever, significant infection symptoms, or symptoms needing pelvic examination may need urgent or in-person care.
Can I discuss painful sex or vaginal dryness online?
Yes, these symptoms can be discussed privately with a GP where telehealth is suitable. The GP may discuss possible causes, testing, treatment options, referral, or examination.
Can sexual health testing be discussed online?
A GP may discuss whether testing is appropriate, but testing is not automatic and may depend on symptoms, exposure risk, local services, and follow-up needs.
Will I get testing or treatment for sexual health symptoms?
Not automatically. The GP may discuss testing, treatment options, referral, follow-up, or examination depending on symptoms and safety factors.
Can I book HerDoc for sexual health or vaginal symptoms?
A non-emergency telehealth consult can be used to discuss sexual health or vaginal symptoms where telehealth is suitable. Suitability depends on symptoms, history, risk factors, medicines, allergies, and the GP's assessment.
What should I prepare before the consult?
Prepare your main symptoms, when they started, relevant medical history, current medicines, allergies, previous results, and what you are hoping to clarify. This helps the GP assess suitability.