Rayveda — sexual health that’s kind, clinical & complete
We combine clinician-led medical care, Ayurvedic wisdom and trauma-aware counselling. Scroll for full documents or tap icons to jump to sections. Sections use native toggles so they work even if scripts are stripped.
About Rayveda
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Mission
At Rayveda, our mission is to empower every individual with evidence-friendly, non-judgmental sexual health care that honours cultural contexts and individual autonomy. We combine clinical science, psychosexual therapy and Ayurvedic wisdom where appropriate to offer products, education and confidential support.
Vision
We aim to create a future where every individual experiences sexual health as a source of wellbeing — with access to the right products and genuine medical education and counseling.
Our Story
Clinical care can feel cold or inaccessible; traditional systems can be fragmented; counselling may not be trauma-aware. People asked for solutions that combined safety, cultural sensitivity and evidence. Rayveda began to bridge that gap by bringing clinicians, Ayurvedic practitioners and sex-positive counsellors together.
What we do
- Clinician-led assessments and evidence-informed treatment pathways.
- Trauma-aware counselling and sex-positive education.
- Ayurvedic lifestyle suggestions and carefully chosen supplements (when clinically appropriate).
- Confidential product access, discreet packaging and medically-informed product guidance.
Principles & commitments
- Safety first: any herbal or traditional regimen is evaluated for interactions and contraindications.
- Evidence-friendly: Ayurvedic approaches are integrated under clinical oversight when recommended.
- No-shame approach: education and counselling without judgement.
- Confidential and discreet: privacy is protected for product delivery and clinical contact.
Goals
- Deliver safe, clinically-validated product options.
- Educate without judgement.
- Provide confidential access to clinicians and counsellors.
- Integrate culturally-sensitive Ayurvedic wisdom where it helps.
Men’s Health
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Men’s Sexual Wellness Overview
Sexual wellness plays a crucial role in the overall physical, mental and relational health of men. It includes libido, erectile function, orgasmic function, ejaculation control and the broader context of intimate relationships.
Benefits to physical health
- Prostate health: Regular sexual activity may assist in maintaining prostate fluid dynamics; routine attention to urinary symptoms is advised.
- Immune & wellbeing: Observational links exist between a healthy sexual life and markers of wellbeing.
Common issues & screening
- Erectile dysfunction (ED): Screen cardiovascular/metabolic health, medication side-effects and psychological contributors — ED can be an early marker of cardiovascular risk.
- Libido changes: Check hormones (testosterone, thyroid), mood and medication effects.
- Ejaculatory disorders: Premature or delayed ejaculation benefit from behavioural and pharmacologic options.
- Pelvic pain / sexual pain syndromes: Early referral to urology and pelvic physiotherapy as indicated.
Prostate & men’s sexual health
Routine checks for prostate symptoms; investigate persistent pelvic pain or sexual pain syndromes with specialist referral.
Erectile dysfunction & devices
- Vacuum erection devices and constriction rings can help when used per manufacturer/clinician guidance; avoid prolonged constriction to prevent tissue injury.
- PDE5 inhibitors are effective for vasculogenic ED but check contraindications (e.g., nitrates).
Hormones & testing
Consider testosterone testing when symptoms (low libido, fatigue, low muscle mass, mood changes) exist — interpret in clinical context and rule out reversible causes (thyroid, acute illness, medications, substances).
Lifestyle & Ayurveda
Lifestyle modifications (exercise, sleep, alcohol moderation, smoking cessation) are frontline. Ayurvedic herbs (Ashwagandha, Shilajit) may be supportive — always disclose herbal use to clinicians to avoid interactions.
Psychological & relational factors
Performance anxiety, relationship stress and mood disorders commonly contribute. Psychotherapy, sex therapy and sensate-focus or graded behavioural approaches help restore intimacy.
Devices, Medications & Safety
- Use devices only as directed; follow hygiene instructions.
- Screen medications known to affect sexual function (SSRIs, antipsychotics, some antihypertensives) and collaborate with prescribers.
Referral & multidisciplinary care
Offer pelvic physiotherapy, urology, endocrinology and psychosexual therapy where appropriate; shared decision-making is essential.
Women’s Sexual Wellness
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Overview
Sexual wellness in women is fundamental to emotional, physical and social wellbeing. It includes comfort with anatomy, pleasurable experiences, pain-free sex when desired, arousal and orgasmic function, and reproductive health.
Physical health benefits
- Sexual dysfunction management: Care pathways address low desire, arousal problems, orgasmic difficulties and sexual pain; identify causes such as infections, nerve damage, hormonal imbalance or pelvic floor dysfunction.
- Reproductive health: Maintaining sexual and reproductive health supports pregnancy outcomes, menstrual health and STI prevention.
Pelvic floor & pain
Pelvic floor dysfunction, vaginismus and dyspareunia need careful assessment — pelvic physiotherapy, graded retraining and multimodal pain management often help. Investigate persistent pelvic pain for endometriosis, vulvodynia, PID or dermatologic causes.
Orgasmic function & arousal
Sensate-focus exercises, anatomy education, pelvic floor training and gradual exposure frequently help. Device safety: use medical-grade materials and condoms for shared toys.
Contraception & screening
Contraception counselling should be integrated with STI and cervical screening as appropriate.
Herbal & lifestyle supports
Ayurvedic lifestyle (diet, sleep, yoga) and some herbal supports may help — discuss with clinicians to avoid interactions.
Counselling & trauma-aware care
Trauma-informed counselling with paced exposure and gradual re-introduction of sexual activities is important for survivors; avoid shame-based or forced exposure approaches.


