Female Pelvic Health Issues deserve the very best medical attention.

Count on us for the private, personal, & professional attention you need.

Privacy Policy

The Center For Pelvic Medicine respects the privacy of every person visiting our website. We have created this privacy statement in order to demonstrate our firm commitment to your privacy.  We don’t collect personally identifiable information. We do collect cookies which are required for the operation of the site.

Unique Personal Information

Please note that we don’t harvest any info about you!

The Center For Pelvic Medicine will not collect any personal information about you i.e., your name, address, telephone number, or email address.

General Information Collected Automatically

In some cases, we may collect information that is not personally-identifiable. Examples of this type of information include the type of Internet browser, of computer operating system and the domain name of the website from which you linked to The Center For Pelvic Medicine.

Information We May Automatically Place On Your Computer’s Hard Drive.

The Center For Pelvic Medicine website will store some information on your computer. This information will be in the form of a “Cookie” or similar file. This information would help us to improve our service we offer in a number of ways.

What is a cookie?

A cookie is a short piece of data, not code, which is sent from a web server to a web browser when that browser visits the server’s site. The cookie is stored on the user’s machine, but it is not an executable program and cannot do anything to your machine. Cookies are required for ASP sites to work properly. They enable the server to tell one user from another. The server doesn’t care about a user’s details–just the fact that one user is different from another.

You can elect to get rid of cookies by going here.

News

Follow @Doctor_Kellogg

February 2, 2020: How Weight Affects Your Sex Drive—and What You Can Do About It by Susan Kellogg Spadt, Ph.D.

How Weight Affects Your Sex Drive—and What You Can Do About It

Susan Kellogg Spadt, Ph.D., director of female sexual medicine at the Center for Pelvic Medicine, Academic Urology in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania.

January 29, 2020 Weight and libido are linked, but it is possible to experience those bow-chicka-wow-wow feelings without losing any weight. Learn how to lose your inhibitions, boost your libido, and regain your sex drive.

Ever felt your desire flicker along with the fit of your jeans? The weight loss and libido connection is real: Your readiness to romp often depends on how you’re feeling about your naked body.

“Many women lose their sexual confidence when they put on weight, but insecurity can also stem from something as subtle as feeling like you have poor muscle tone,” says Susan Kellogg Spadt, Ph.D., director of female sexual medicine at the Center for Pelvic Medicine, Academic Urology in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. “In my practice, I see it daily in women of all weights.”

Center for Pelvic Medicine
919 Conestoga Road,
Building 1, Suite 301
Rosemont, PA 19010
tel: 610-525-0541

Directions
https://centerforpelvicmedicine.com/center-for-pelvic-medicine-office-location/

February 3, 2017: Insurance now participating with traditional medicare plans.

At each visit, patients are provided a “medical receipt”  that they can use to submit to individual insurance plans that offer “out of network “ or “health savings plan” reimbursement options.

January 31, 2017: The National Vulvodynia Association

Dr. Kellogg was named to the Executive Board of The National Vulvodynia Association.