Premature Ejaculation Treatment in Mumbai, Online and Nearby With Long-Term Solution
Premature ejaculation can disturb a man’s confidence, create anxiety before intimacy, and leave both partners emotionally and sexually unsatisfied. Many men silently suffer because they feel embarrassed, guilty, ashamed, or afraid that they will never be able to control their excitement.
Dr. Hitesh Shah offers confidential premature ejaculation treatment in Mumbai, nearby areas, and online through INTEGRATED SEXOLOGY®, a holistic and root-cause-oriented approach that understands the body, mind, emotions, sexual arousal pattern, relationship, lifestyle, stress and partner dynamics together.
Consult Dr. Hitesh Shah, Medical Doctor, Classical Homeopath, Sexologist, Pre-Marriage Counsellor, Personal Counsellor, Stress Management Expert and Founder of INTEGRATED SEXOLOGY® with 26+ years of clinical experience.
Quick Answer
Premature ejaculation means ejaculation happens sooner than desired, often with a feeling of poor control and distress for the man or couple. It may be lifelong, acquired, situational, anxiety-related, relationship-linked, medically influenced, or connected to sexual conditioning and arousal patterns. PE is treatable/manageable in many cases with the right combination of education, behavioural techniques, counselling, partner guidance, medical evaluation, lifestyle correction and root-cause understanding. Mayo Clinic describes premature ejaculation as treatable and notes that medicines, counselling and delaying techniques may help improve sex for both partners. Dr. Hitesh Shah’s INTEGRATED SEXOLOGY® approach focuses on helping the person understand and gradually improve his fast pace of sexual excitement and arousal response pattern for a more controlled, confident and satisfying sexual experience.
When Excitement Becomes Anxiety
A man may love his partner deeply, desire intimacy, and genuinely want to satisfy her. But as soon as intimacy begins, excitement rises very fast. He becomes conscious of his timing. The fear starts: “What if I finish too early again?”
The more he tries to control, the more anxious he becomes. The more anxious he becomes, the faster his excitement rises. Ejaculation happens quickly. He feels disappointed, ashamed and helpless.
His partner may feel confused. She may wonder, “Is he only focused on himself?” or “Why does intimacy end before I feel involved?” Over time, the man may start avoiding sex, while the partner may feel emotionally and physically unsatisfied.
This is why premature ejaculation treatment should not focus only on “delay.” It should understand the man’s arousal pattern, anxiety, sexual learning, partner response, foreplay quality, relationship communication, body sensitivity, stress and confidence.
The goal is not just to last longer. The deeper goal is to develop better co
WHAT IS PREMATURE EJACULATION?
Definition
Premature ejaculation is a male sexual concern where ejaculation happens earlier than desired, often before or soon after penetration, with a feeling of poor control and distress for the man or his partner.
The International Society for Sexual Medicine describes PE as ejaculation that always or almost always happens before or within about one minute of penetration, along with inability to delay ejaculation and negative personal consequences such as distress, bother, frustration or avoidance of intimacy.
Simple Definition Box
Premature ejaculation means a man reaches orgasm and ejaculates too quickly, before he or his partner feels sexually satisfied, and he feels unable to control the fast pace of excitement.
This definition also matches the PE guidance in Dr. Shah’s attached clinical material, which explains PE as a rush of sexual excitement that the man is not able to control, resulting in ejaculation too quickly and leaving him and especially his partner unsatisfied.
What PE Is Not
Premature ejaculation is not proof of weakness.
It is not always permanent.
It is not always due to lack of willpower.
It is not always solved by delay sprays or tablets.
It is not always only a physical sensitivity problem.
It is often a body-mind-relationship-arousal pattern issue.
WHY MEN DELAY SEEKING HELP
Many men do not discuss premature ejaculation because they feel ashamed. Some believe they should “know how to control it naturally.” Some compare themselves with porn, friends’ stories, or unrealistic ideas about male performance.
Others start using sprays, condoms, tablets, alcohol, herbal products or online “stamina boosters” without understanding the real cause.
But delay can increase anxiety, partner dissatisfaction and avoidance of intimacy.
Early Consultation Helps Because It Can:
Reduce shame and fear
Clarify whether PE is lifelong or acquired
Identify psychological, medical or relationship factors
Prevent unnecessary self-medication
Improve partner understanding
Teach practical control methods
Build confidence gradually
Create a long-term solution plan
The NHS describes premature ejaculation as a common ejaculation problem and notes that occasional episodes are common, but if it happens more than desired and becomes a problem, treatment can help.
WHY PREMATURE EJACULATION MATTERS
Impact on Self
Premature ejaculation may make a man feel inadequate, guilty or embarrassed. He may start feeling, “I am not able to satisfy my partner.” This can reduce sexual confidence and increase anxiety before every intimate moment.
Impact on Partner
The partner may feel physically unsatisfied, emotionally neglected or confused. She may not always express it directly, but repeated dissatisfaction can create frustration, distance or resentment.
Impact on Couple Relationship
PE can disturb romance, foreplay, emotional closeness and sexual harmony. Sometimes couples stop discussing sex because every conversation becomes sensitive. Silence then becomes the real enemy.
Impact on Mental Peace
A man may start thinking about the problem throughout the day. He may avoid intimacy not because he lacks desire, but because he fears another failure.
Impact on Marriage
In newly married couples, PE may create disappointment, misunderstanding and pressure. In long-married couples, it may add to existing emotional distance, routine or lack of intimacy.
AGE-WISE IMPACT
Teenagers and Young Adults
Young men may develop quick ejaculation habits through hurried masturbation, fear of being caught, porn conditioning, guilt or anxiety. Some may panic and think they are permanently weak.
Men in Their 20s
Performance pressure, first relationship anxiety, porn comparison, body image concerns, guilt and lack of sexual education may contribute.
Newly Married Men
Newly married men often face pressure to perform, satisfy, conceive or prove masculinity. If early experiences are disappointing, anxiety can become a cycle.
Men in Their 30s and 40s
Work stress, marital pressure, reduced romance, lifestyle issues, emotional distance, fatigue and relationship conflict may worsen PE.
Men in Long-Term Marriage
In long-term marriage, PE may become part of a larger intimacy pattern involving routine sex, reduced foreplay, emotional disconnection or unresolved resentment.
Men Above 50
PE may sometimes appear along with erectile dysfunction, prostate-related symptoms, diabetes, medications, anxiety or health concerns. Medical evaluation becomes more important.
NRIs and High-Pressure Professionals
Long-distance relationships, work stress, travel, performance pressure during short visits, emotional loneliness and irregular sleep can affect arousal control.
ROOT CAUSES OF PREMATURE EJACULATION
Premature ejaculation is rarely only one problem. It can be a combination of body sensitivity, fast arousal, anxiety, habits, relationship patterns, medical factors and sexual learning.
Psychological Causes
Performance anxiety
Fear of failure
Overexcitement
Guilt around sex
Low confidence
Past embarrassing sexual experience
Fear of disappointing partner
Obsessive self-monitoring
Depression or stress
Fear of losing erection
Relationship Causes
Poor communication
Lack of emotional safety
Partner criticism or pressure
Lack of foreplay
Unresolved conflict
Low romance
Sex becoming a task
Fertility pressure
Fear of partner dissatisfaction
Sexual Learning and Conditioning
Hurried masturbation
Fear-based early sexual habits
Porn-based expectations
Goal-oriented sex
Poor awareness of arousal stages
Rushing to penetration
Lack of foreplay skills
Belief that intercourse alone is “real sex”
Medical and Biological Factors
Erectile dysfunction
Prostate inflammation or infection
Thyroid imbalance
High sensitivity
Medication effects
Substance use
Anxiety disorders
Neurological factors in selected cases
Hormonal or metabolic issues in some men
The AUA/SMSNA guideline notes that management of ejaculation disorders may include psychological, behavioural and pharmacotherapy options, and that shared decision-making and partner involvement can help optimize outcomes.
Lifestyle and Stress Factors
Poor sleep
Work pressure
Sedentary lifestyle
Alcohol or tobacco
Screen overload
Excessive caffeine
Lack of exercise
Emotional fatigue
Chronic stress
Long commute or shift work
Dr. Shah’s Integrated Sexology material emphasizes evaluation of biological, medical, hormonal, emotional, stress, relationship, lifestyle, work stress, sleep, exercise, nutrition, habits and medicine-related factors before reaching a conclusion.
WARNING SIGNS
When Should You Consult a Sexologist?
You should consult a qualified sexologist if:
Ejaculation repeatedly happens too quickly
You feel unable to control excitement
Your partner remains unsatisfied
You avoid intimacy due to fear
You feel shame, guilt or anxiety before sex
You use sprays, tablets or alcohol repeatedly to delay ejaculation
The problem started after stress, marriage, conflict or health issues
PE is affecting your relationship
You also have erection problems
You feel depressed or hopeless about your sexual life
Safety Note
Seek urgent medical help if sexual symptoms are associated with severe depression, suicidal thoughts, chest pain, painful erection, genital pain, discharge, fever, suspected infection, blood in urine/semen, sudden neurological symptoms, or severe pelvic pain.
COMMON MISTAKES MEN MAKE
Self-medicating with delay tablets
Using numbing sprays without guidance
Taking online “stamina” products
Using alcohol to delay ejaculation
Rushing penetration without foreplay
Avoiding partner communication
Comparing timing with porn
Thinking PE means permanent weakness
Blaming partner
Ignoring erectile dysfunction
Ignoring stress and sleep
Treating only the symptom and not the arousal pattern
Reading too much online and increasing fear
Topical anaesthetic treatments can reduce sensitivity, but they may sometimes cause irritation or reduce partner sensation if not used properly, according to British Association of Urological Surgeons patient guidance.
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TREATMENT OPTIONS FOR PREMATURE EJACULATION
A responsible PE plan should be personalized. The best approach depends on whether the problem is lifelong, acquired, situational, anxiety-related, relationship-related, medically linked or mixed.
1. Behavioural Techniques
Behavioural methods may include start-stop technique, squeeze technique, arousal awareness, pause training, breathing control, pelvic floor awareness and gradual control training.
These methods can help a man understand the rising stages of excitement instead of reacting only at the last moment.
2. Counselling and Psychosexual Therapy
Counselling helps when PE is linked to anxiety, guilt, fear of failure, poor sexual confidence, hurried sexual habits, relationship pressure or sexual misinformation.
It can help the man change the meaning of sex from “performance test” to “shared intimacy.”
3. Couple Counselling
Partner response matters. If the partner becomes critical, the man’s anxiety worsens. If the partner becomes supportive, learning becomes easier.
Couple counselling can improve communication, reduce blame, improve foreplay and rebuild intimacy.
4. Contemporary Medical Treatment
Medical treatment may include evaluation for erectile dysfunction, prostate issues, thyroid problems, anxiety disorders, medication effects or other physical contributors.
The AUA/SMSNA guideline lists daily SSRIs, on-demand clomipramine or dapoxetine where available, and topical penile anaesthetics as first-line pharmacotherapies for premature ejaculation in appropriate cases. Mayo Clinic also lists behavioural techniques, medications and counselling as common treatment options.
Medicines should not be started without medical advice. They may have side effects, interactions or limitations, and they may not address relationship, confidence, foreplay, arousal pattern or emotional causes if used alone.
5. Lifestyle and Stress Management
Better sleep, exercise, relaxation, reduced alcohol, reduced tobacco, stress control, healthier routine and reduced screen overload may support better sexual control, especially in stress-related PE.
6. OTC Products and Supplements
Many men try sprays, stamina capsules, herbal products, shilajit, ashwagandha, safed musli, kaunch beej, gokshura or other products. Some may have traditional or general health value, but random use can lead to false hope, adulteration risk, overdependence or delayed diagnosis.
7. INTEGRATED SEXOLOGY®
Dr. Hitesh Shah’s INTEGRATED SEXOLOGY® evaluates PE as a complete body-mind-relationship-arousal pattern issue. It integrates medical assessment, homeopathic constitutional understanding where appropriate, psychosexual counselling, couple guidance, sex therapy methods, stress management, lifestyle correction, sexual education and follow-up.
The Integrated Sexology manual describes this as a novel and unique approach conceived and practised by Dr. Hiteshkumar Dalpatray Shah, integrating Homeopathy, Ayurveda, Naturopathy, Modern Medicine, Sex Therapy, Couple Therapy, Couple Counselling, Pre-Marriage Counselling, Marriage Counselling, Stress Management, Healthy Lifestyle Guidance, Lifestyle Disorder Management and habits/addiction management for sexual dysfunctions.
| Approach | What It Focuses On | Where It May Help | Limitation If Used Alone | Role in Long-Term Healing |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Delay tablets | Chemical delay of ejaculation | Selected cases under medical supervision | May not change arousal pattern, anxiety or couple dynamics | Can be useful if properly prescribed |
| Numbing sprays | Reduced penile sensitivity | High sensitivity or temporary delay | May reduce pleasure, cause irritation, affect partner sensation | Limited role if used blindly |
| OTC supplements | Stamina or vitality claims | May give hope or placebo confidence | Quality, adulteration and false claims are concerns | Should not replace diagnosis |
| Counselling-only approach | Anxiety, guilt, performance fear | Stress-related or psychological PE | May miss medical causes | Important when mind and confidence are involved |
| Urology-only approach | Medical/prostate/physical factors | Acquired PE with medical symptoms | May not address relationship or emotional factors | Needed when medical cause is suspected |
| Lifestyle-only approach | Sleep, exercise, stress, habits | Stress and fatigue-related PE | May be incomplete alone | Good supporting foundation |
| INTEGRATED SEXOLOGY® | Body, mind, arousal pattern, relationship, stress, lifestyle and sexual learning | Mixed PE, anxiety PE, couple distress, long-term confidence | Requires active participation and follow-up | Broader root-cause-oriented approach |
HOW INTEGRATED SEXOLOGY® LOOKS AT PE DIFFERENTLY
Arousal Control, Not Just Ejaculation Delay
Many treatments focus only on delaying ejaculation. INTEGRATED SEXOLOGY® asks deeper questions:
Why does excitement rise too fast?
Is there anxiety before intimacy?
Is the man rushing because of fear of losing erection?
Is foreplay too short or too goal-oriented?
Is the partner emotionally unsatisfied?
Is there guilt, shame, porn conditioning or pressure?
Is there relationship conflict?
Is there stress, poor sleep or fatigue?
Is there erectile dysfunction hidden behind PE?
Is there a medical or hormonal factor?
Dr. Shah’s PE-specific guidance emphasizes that INTEGRATED SEXOLOGY® should help the person develop control over his fast pace of excitement and improve his sexual arousal and response pattern for a lasting solution.
The INTEGRATED SEXOLOGY® Framework for PE
Medical assessment
Sexual history
Arousal pattern assessment
Psychological and emotional evaluation
Relationship and partner dynamics
Foreplay and intimacy guidance
Sex therapy techniques
Homeopathic constitutional support where appropriate
Stress management
Lifestyle correction
Education and awareness
Couple communication
Follow-up and progress tracking
The Integrated Sexology manual emphasizes comprehensive assessment, individualized treatment planning, treatment implementation, counselling, lifestyle modification, monitoring and follow-up.
Core Principle
Temporary delay is not enough. Long-term improvement comes from understanding and retraining the man’s sexual arousal response pattern.
DIAGNOSIS AND ASSESSMENT PROCESS
How Dr. Hitesh Shah May Evaluate Premature Ejaculation
A proper PE consultation may include:
Age and marital status
Whether PE is lifelong or acquired
Duration and severity
Ejaculation timing pattern
Level of control
Level of distress
Partner satisfaction
Foreplay quality
Relationship atmosphere
Fear of failure
Erectile confidence
Porn and masturbation pattern where relevant
Stress and sleep pattern
Medical history
Medicines or substance use
Thyroid, prostate or metabolic concerns where relevant
Previous treatments tried
Need for investigations or referral if required
Dr. Shah’s clinical material emphasizes a detailed, empathetic, conversational evaluation, asking one question at a time, understanding genesis, cause, origin, duration, progress, intensity, diagnosis, life-space events, partner impact and relationship impact.
TREATMENT JOURNEY WITH DR. HITESH SHAH
Step 1: Confidential Consultation
The patient is welcomed without judgment. Shame begins to reduce when the problem is discussed scientifically and respectfully.
Step 2: Root-Cause Assessment
The aim is to understand whether PE is anxiety-related, arousal-pattern-related, relationship-related, medically linked, lifestyle-related or mixed.
Step 3: Arousal Pattern Understanding
The patient learns how excitement rises, where control is lost, and how to recognize the point before ejaculation becomes unavoidable.
Step 4: Personalized Treatment Plan
No two men are treated exactly the same. A newly married anxious man, a long-married stressed man, and a man with PE plus ED may need different plans.
Step 5: Psychosexual Education
The patient learns about arousal stages, foreplay, communication, realistic expectations and sexual confidence.
Step 6: Behavioural and Control Techniques
Suitable techniques may be guided depending on the case, such as start-stop training, sensate focus, breathing, pacing, and couple-based exercises.
Step 7: Couple Guidance
Where needed, the partner is guided to reduce pressure, support learning, improve intimacy and avoid blame.
Step 8: Medical or Homeopathic Support Where Appropriate
Depending on the individual case, medical advice, homeopathic constitutional support, or referral may be considered.
Step 9: Long-Term Confidence and Intimacy Rebuilding
The final goal is not only longer timing. It is better control, less fear, more partner satisfaction, and healthier intimacy.
PARTNER GUIDANCE
How a Partner Can Help
A supportive partner can make treatment easier.
Do not mock or shame
Do not compare him with others
Avoid making sex a performance test
Encourage communication
Appreciate effort and progress
Focus on affection and foreplay
Avoid blame
Participate in couple guidance if needed
Understand that PE is often multidimensional
Build emotional closeness outside the bedroom
Healing Sentence for Couples
“We will learn this together, without pressure and blame.”
This sentence can reduce shame and create teamwork.
MYTHS AND FACTS
Myth 1: PE means a man is weak.
Fact: PE is a common sexual concern and may be linked to arousal pattern, anxiety, sensitivity, relationship factors, medical issues or sexual learning.
Myth 2: PE cannot be improved.
Fact: Many men improve with proper assessment, counselling, behavioural methods, partner support, medical guidance where needed and lifestyle correction.
Myth 3: Delay sprays are the only solution.
Fact: Sprays may temporarily reduce sensitivity, but they do not always address anxiety, rushing, relationship pressure or arousal control.
Myth 4: PE is always psychological.
Fact: Psychological factors are common, but physical and medical factors can also contribute.
Myth 5: If a man ejaculates quickly, he is selfish.
Fact: Many men with PE deeply care about their partner but feel helpless due to poor control and anxiety.
Myth 6: Alcohol is a good solution for PE.
Fact: Alcohol may temporarily reduce anxiety for some men but can harm sexual function, confidence, relationship and health over time.
Myth 7: Porn teaches sexual performance.
Fact: Porn often creates unrealistic timing, performance and body expectations.
Myth 8: Only the man needs help.
Fact: Partner support, couple communication and emotional safety can strongly influence progress.
FAQ ACCORDION SECTION
Use these as Elementor Accordion items.
FAQ 1: What is premature ejaculation?
Premature ejaculation means ejaculation happens sooner than desired, often with poor control and distress. It may happen before penetration, soon after penetration, or before both partners feel satisfied. It can be lifelong, acquired, situational, psychological, medical, relationship-related or mixed.
FAQ 2: Is premature ejaculation common?
Yes. Premature ejaculation is a common male sexual concern. Occasional early ejaculation may happen due to excitement, long gap, stress or anxiety. But if it happens repeatedly and causes distress or partner dissatisfaction, professional guidance can help.
FAQ 3: Can stress cause premature ejaculation?
Yes. Stress can increase body tension, reduce awareness, increase anxiety and make excitement rise faster. Work stress, family stress, sleep disturbance and emotional overload can all affect sexual control.
FAQ 4: Is PE physical or psychological?
PE can be physical, psychological or mixed. Anxiety, guilt, fear of failure, hurried sexual habits and relationship pressure are common. But prostate issues, thyroid imbalance, erectile dysfunction, medication effects or other medical factors may also contribute.
FAQ 5: Can premature ejaculation affect marriage?
Yes. PE can affect sexual satisfaction, romance, emotional closeness and partner confidence. The man may avoid intimacy due to shame, while the partner may feel dissatisfied or rejected. Couple communication is important.
FAQ 6: Should I use delay spray?
Delay sprays may help some men temporarily by reducing sensitivity, but they should not be used blindly. They can reduce pleasure, irritate skin, or affect the partner’s sensation if not used properly. Root-cause assessment is better.
FAQ 7: Are tablets needed for PE?
Some men may benefit from medically prescribed medicines. But tablets should be used only after proper consultation. They may not address anxiety, arousal pattern, relationship issues, foreplay problems or lifestyle causes if used alone.
FAQ 8: Can PE be treated without dependency?
Many men can improve through arousal awareness, behavioural methods, counselling, couple support, lifestyle improvement and root-cause correction. Some may need medical support temporarily. The goal should be long-term confidence, not blind dependency.
FAQ 9: Can homeopathy help premature ejaculation?
Homeopathy may be considered as part of a holistic plan depending on the individual’s constitution, emotional state, anxiety, stress and overall health. In INTEGRATED SEXOLOGY®, homeopathy is combined with medical understanding, psychosexual counselling, couple guidance, lifestyle correction and stress management where appropriate.
FAQ 10: Is online consultation possible?
Yes. Online consultation may be suitable for many men and couples who prefer privacy, live outside Mumbai, or are NRIs. However, some cases may require physical examination, investigations or specialist referral.
FAQ 11: Is consultation confidential?
Yes. Sexual concerns require privacy and dignity. Confidential consultation allows the man or couple to speak openly without shame or judgment.
FAQ 12: How does INTEGRATED SEXOLOGY® help PE?
INTEGRATED SEXOLOGY® studies PE as a body-mind-relationship-arousal pattern issue. It evaluates medical, psychological, emotional, relationship, lifestyle, stress and sexual learning factors, then creates a personalized plan for better control and long-term confidence.
FAQ 13: What should my partner do?
The partner should avoid criticism, pressure and comparison. Supportive communication, affection, patience and participation in couple guidance can help reduce anxiety and improve intimacy.
FAQ 14: Can PE and ED occur together?
Yes. Some men rush because they fear losing erection. In such cases, PE may be connected with erectile anxiety. Both issues need to be understood together.
FAQ 15: When should I consult a sexologist?
Consult if PE is repeated, distressing, affecting your partner, causing avoidance, creating shame, or making you dependent on products. Also consult if PE started suddenly or is associated with pain, urinary symptoms, ED, anxiety or health problems.
Premature ejaculation is a male sexual concern involving early ejaculation, reduced control and distress.
PE may be lifelong, acquired, situational, anxiety-related, relationship-linked, medically influenced or mixed.
Treatment may include behavioural techniques, counselling, partner guidance, medical evaluation and medicines in selected cases.
Partner involvement and shared decision-making can support better outcomes in ejaculation disorders.
Delay sprays and medicines may help selected men but should not replace root-cause assessment.
INTEGRATED SEXOLOGY® by Dr. Hitesh Shah presents PE as a body-mind-relationship-arousal pattern issue, requiring individualized, multidisciplinary assessment and treatment.
Online consultation may help suitable patients seeking privacy, but some cases require physical examination, investigations or referral.
Premature ejaculation is a male sexual concern involving early ejaculation, reduced control and distress.
PE may be lifelong, acquired, situational, anxiety-related, relationship-linked, medically influenced or mixed.
Treatment may include behavioural techniques, counselling, partner guidance, medical evaluation and medicines in selected cases.
Partner involvement and shared decision-making can support better outcomes in ejaculation disorders.
Delay sprays and medicines may help selected men but should not replace root-cause assessment.
INTEGRATED SEXOLOGY® by Dr. Hitesh Shah presents PE as a body-mind-relationship-arousal pattern issue, requiring individualized, multidisciplinary assessment and treatment.
Online consultation may help suitable patients seeking privacy, but some cases require physical examination, investigations or referral.
Patient Journey 1: Individual Male
Anonymous patient story, shared with consent:
“I came with shame and fear because I was ejaculating very quickly. I had tried delay products but the anxiety continued. After consultation, I understood my fast arousal pattern, stress and fear of failure. The guidance helped me approach intimacy with more confidence.”
Patient Journey 2: Newly Married Couple
Anonymous couple story, shared with consent:
“We were newly married and intimacy had become stressful. Counselling helped us understand that pressure was worsening the problem. We learned communication, patience and gradual control.”
Patient Journey 3: Long-Married Couple
Anonymous couple story, shared with consent:
“Years of routine, stress and lack of communication had affected our intimacy. The treatment approach helped us look beyond timing and rebuild emotional closeness.”
Do Not Suffer Silently
Premature ejaculation is not something to hide, fear or self-treat blindly. It deserves mature, confidential and root-cause-oriented care.
Dr. Hitesh Shah offers premature ejaculation consultation in Kandivali West, Mumbai and online for suitable cases through INTEGRATED SEXOLOGY®, a holistic clinical approach that understands the complete person, couple and arousal pattern behind the symptom.
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