Urology for Gay and Bisexual Men

Feeling safe with your doctor matters—particularly when symptoms are intimate, examinations can feel vulnerable, or treatment may affect sexual function.

This page explains how I approach urology care for gay and bisexual men in a way that is clinically thorough, respectful, and straightforward. It is not about making assumptions. It is about creating the conditions for accurate history-taking, good decision-making, and better care.

What you can expect in a consultation

  • Privacy and discretion. Your information is handled confidentially, and you can choose how much you disclose.

  • Clear, practical language. You won’t be forced into awkward phrasing or vague euphemisms to be understood.

  • Clinical focus with cultural awareness. Sexual practices and relationship context can matter medically. If they’re relevant, we address them professionally and without judgement.

  • Judgement-led recommendations. The goal is the right diagnosis and the right pathway—sometimes treatment, sometimes monitoring, sometimes reassurance.

Why tailored care can matter

Some urological presentations and treatment side-effects intersect with sexual health in ways that are not always addressed well in general information. A few examples include:

  • urinary or pelvic symptoms that overlap with infection, inflammation, or pelvic floor dysfunction

  • sexual health considerations during prostate cancer treatment and recovery

  • comfort and dignity during examinations, investigations, and peri-operative care

If you’re looking for practical guidance

If you want practical information (symptoms, red flags, what to bring to an appointment, and common questions), see:

Urology Care for Gay & Bisexual Men: Practical Resources

Our Commitment 

I aim to provide urology care for gay and bisexual men that is clinically thorough, respectful, and straightforward.

That means:

  • you can speak openly about symptoms and sexual health where it is medically relevant

  • your privacy is taken seriously, and you control what you disclose

  • discussions and examinations are handled professionally, without assumptions or judgement

  • recommendations are judgement-led and tailored to your situation—not a one-size-fits-all script

If you would like practical guidance (common concerns, red flags, what to bring to an appointment), see Urology Care for Gay & Bisexual Men: Practical Resources.

If you’d like to book or ask a question first, you can contact the rooms.

Clinical note

This page provides general information and does not replace individual medical advice. If you have severe pain, fever with urinary symptoms, blood in the urine, or cannot pass urine, seek urgent medical review.