← Home
The Mel Robbins Podcast #380 · March 22, 2026 · 2h 14m

The Ultimate Guide to Women's Sexual Health, Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) & Menopause

Urologist and sexual medicine specialist Rachel Rubin delivers a comprehensive breakdown of women's hormonal health across all life stages. The headline: the FDA removed false warning labels from vaginal hormones in February 2026, ending decades of fear-based misinformation. Vaginal estrogen reduces UTI risk by over 50% and costs $7/month. The word 'clitoris' doesn't appear in OB-GYN training requirements. A landmark episode for women's health literacy.

Canon

Rubin's discussion of how hormone disruption affects women across all life stages connects to the broader endocrine disruptor crisis — hormonal changes from external chemicals overlap with the fertility decline documented by Swan.

Highlights

FDA removed false warning labels from vaginal hormones
On Feb 12, 2026, the FDA officially removed labels claiming vaginal hormones cause stroke, blood clots, heart attacks, and dementia — ending decades of fear-based misinformation.
Vaginal estrogen prevents UTIs by >50% at $7/month
Microdosed vaginal estrogen products reduce UTI risk by over half. Most women don't know this option exists.
'Clitoris' not in OB-GYN training requirements
The word clitoris doesn't appear in what a gynecologist needs to know to graduate — a systemic gap in women's health education.

Editorial

GSM affects women at all ages, not just menopause
Genitourinary syndrome of menopause isn't limited to older women — it impacts those on birth control, breastfeeding mothers, and cancer patients.

Misc

FDA removed cardiovascular/dementia warning labels from vaginal hormones on Feb 12, 2026
Dr. Rubin: 'Your box label tried to kill my mother' — the date happened to be her late mother's birthday
Vaginal estrogen reduces UTIs by >50% at $7/month
'Clitoris' doesn't appear in what gynecologists need to know to graduate
Also appeared on Peter Attia's podcast (#348) covering similar material
GSM (genitourinary syndrome of menopause) affects women on birth control and breastfeeding — not just menopause