Pelvic Health
Pelvic health concerns like urinary incontinence and vaginal laxity are common, and there are effective, discreet treatment options available.

What Is Pelvic Health?
Pelvic floor dysfunction is more common than most people discuss. Stress urinary incontinence, leaking when coughing, sneezing, or exercising, affects a significant proportion of women, particularly after childbirth or during menopause. Vaginal laxity and reduced sensation can also develop over time.
These are treatable conditions. Non-invasive options address the underlying muscle and tissue tone without surgery, recovery time, or discomfort, making it easier to address concerns that have often been dismissed as simply part of aging.
Why Choose Us At Whistler Medical Aesthetics?
Whistler Medical Aesthetics was built around a simple belief: aging is a journey to be embraced, not something to be feared.
Under the guidance of Dr. Sarah Kennea, an internationally recognized MD Codes™ expert, our approach is evidence-based and deeply personalized, treating each patient's anatomy and story as unique rather than applying the same protocol to everyone who walks through the door. An accurate diagnosis at the outset, backed by real training and experience, is what separates a treatment plan that works from one that doesn't.
Our clinic reflects that same philosophy end to end: a calm, unpretentious space with floor-to-ceiling views of Rainbow and Sproat mountains, a private complimentary consultation for every new patient, and an ongoing commitment to education so your plan evolves as your goals do. The result is conservative, natural, and progressive change.
Frequently Asked Questions

Childbirth, aging, and hormonal changes around menopause are common contributors, though pelvic floor weakness can develop for other reasons as well.
Yes. Non-invasive options can strengthen the underlying muscle and tissue tone without surgery, recovery time, or discomfort.
No. While it's common postpartum, pelvic floor weakness can also develop with age, during menopause, or for other reasons unrelated to childbirth.
Often, yes. Many patients also report improvements in core stability and sexual function, since the pelvic floor plays a role in all of these.
A consultation is the right starting point. We'll review your history and symptoms to confirm whether treatment is a good fit for your specific situation.
