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Health, Longevity & Biohacking

Medical Schools Do Not Require Teaching the Word Clitoris to OB-GYN Students

Diary of a CEO · Medical Whistleblower: What Your Doctor Doesn’t Know Is Hurting You | Dr Rachel Rubin · June 22, 2026
Medical Schools Do Not Require Teaching the Word Clitoris to OB-GYN Students
Diary of a CEO
Diary of a CEO
Medical Whistleblower: What Your Doctor Doesn’t Know Is Hurting You | Dr Rachel Rubin
"The word clitoris today in 2026 does not exist in the checklist for what an OB-GYN has to learn in their training."
Rubin revealed that OB-GYN medical training in 2026 does not include the word 'clitoris' in mandatory curriculum checklists, meaning gynecologists are not required to learn about this organ central to female sexual function. This institutional gap explains widespread ignorance about women's sexual health among trained specialists.

About this episode

In this episode of The Diary of a CEO, host Steven Bartlett speaks with Dr. Rachel Rubin, a urologist and sexual health specialist, for an unflinching examination of systemic failures in women's healthcare. The conversation opens with Rubin's declaration that she is 'filled with rage' because women across all socioeconomic levels—from Halle Berry to Melinda Gates—are being denied access to life-saving information and treatments for hormonal health, sexual function, and menopause. Rubin reveals shocking gaps in medical education: the word 'clitoris' does not appear in mandatory OB-GYN training checklists, over 75% of menopausal women are denied prescriptions for vaginal hormones that prevent deadly UTIs, and only 1.7% of eligible women receive hormone replacement therapy despite updated safety evidence. She explains that testosterone in women peaks in their 30s—not at menopause—and that 23% of women have clitoral adhesions blocking orgasm, a condition easily fixed but almost never diagnosed because doctors don't examine the clitoris. The episode covers the biology of female arousal, the orgasm gap between men and women, how birth control affects libido, the safety and efficacy of vaginal estrogen creams available for as little as $14, and why penetrative sex is not how most women orgasm. Rubin dismantles myths around hormone therapy stemming from a misinterpreted 2002 study, advocates for men to understand female anatomy as a relational duty, and argues that education and communication—not just psychosocial factors—are essential to solving widespread sexual dysfunction. Bartlett shares personal stories of past relationship struggles caused by ignorance, underscoring Rubin's thesis that basic biological literacy could save countless partnerships.

Key takeaways

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