DAVID FOLK THOMAS: Dr. Rosenberg, how do you become a sex therapist? Are they licensed?
KEN ROSENBERG, MD: Hopefully they're licensed, and people can be licensed in a variety of ways, but unfortunately, it's not like become a psychologist or a psychiatrist where you have boards and you have 10 million people watching you and exams and a whole protocol. Someone can call themselves a sex therapist if they take a weekend seminar or if they're at a several a year study course at Cornell University, where we're at.
ROBERT J. FILEWICH, PhD: In the State of New York there's really no law that really prohibits people from calling themselves a therapist of any kind, including a sex therapist.
KEN ROSENBERG, MD: So you try to find a good therapist, a good psychiatrist, a good psychologist who has some specialties in sexual disorders, because you don't know who you're going to see if you just find someone who just calls themselves a sex therapist.
DAVID FOLK THOMAS: And patients who go to see sex therapists, what are the reasons they go there?
KEN ROSENBERG, MD: So many. The most common reason for men is probably, right now, erectile dysfunction. Impotence is a major reason why men seek help, especially with all the publicity around Viagra and that sort of thing.
ROBERT J. FILEWICH: That and premature ejaculation. Those are probably the two major ones.