Vaginal steaming: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 20:50, 8 February 2025

Vaginal steaming, sometimes shortened to V-steaming,<ref name=LiveScience>

No, Gwenyth Paltrow, Vaginas don't need to be steam cleaned(link). LiveScience. LiveScience. January 30, 2015.



</ref> and also known as yoni steaming, is an alternative health treatment whereby a woman squats or sits over steaming water containing herbs such as mugwort, rosemary, wormwood, and basil. It has been practiced in Africa (Mozambique, South Africa<ref name=jwh/>), Asia (Indonesia, Thailand<ref name=jwh>,

 Prevalence, motivations, and adverse effects of vaginal practices in Africa and Asia: findings from a multicountry household survey., 
 Journal of Women's Health, 
 
 Vol. 20(Issue: 7),
 pp. 1097–109,
 DOI: 10.1089/jwh.2010.2281,
 PMID: 21668355,</ref>), and Central America (among the Q'eqchi' people<ref>Jillian, 
  
 Q'eqchi' Maya Reproductive Ethnomedicine. online version, 
  
 Springer, 
 2014, 
  
  
 ISBN 9783319107448, 
  
  
  
 Pages: 21–22,</ref>).

Vaginal steaming is described in spas as an ancient Korean treatment for reproductive organ ailments and is claimed to have other benefits. No empirical evidence supports any of these claims.<ref name="Guardian-1"/> It has become a fad for women in the Western world.<ref name="d">

I Tried A Vaginal Steam Treatment, And Here's What Happened(link). Huffington Post.




</ref> In a paper for Culture, Health & Sexuality, Vandenburg and Braun argue that the rhetoric of vaginal steaming mirrors sexist Western discourse about the supposed inherent dirtiness of the female body, and that its claims of improved fertility and sexual pleasure continue the view that the female body exists for male sexual pleasure and childbearing.

Prevalence

According to a study on vaginal practices by the World Health Organization published in 2011, one of the ways in which women practice vaginal care is by "Vaginal steaming or smoking: the 'steaming' or 'smoking' of the vagina, by sitting above a source of heat (fire, coals, hot rocks) on which water, herbs, or oils are placed to create steam or smoke".<ref name=jwh/> For that study, over 4,000 women in Tete (Mozambique), KwaZulu-Natal (South Africa), Yogyakarta (Indonesia), and Chonburi (Thailand) were asked about their vaginal care. When it came to vaginal steaming/smoking, very different results were obtained, and very different reasons were given: in Chonburi, 67% of women reported having performed vaginal steaming or smoking, "which they associated with maintaining wellness and feminine identity", especially after having given birth (85.5%). In Tete, only 10% of women practiced steaming or smoking, "mostly intended to enhance male sexual pleasure by causing vaginal tightening (64.1% of users) and drying (22.9%)". In the two African locations, 37–38% of women said they practiced it to enhance "male sexual pleasure"; in the two Asian ones, 0% gave that answer. Conversely, of the Asian women 26% reported their "feminine identity" was a reason, compared to 0% of the African women.<ref name=jwh/>

Risks

Side effects and potential dangers include: allergic reactions, second-degree burns if the steam is too close,<ref name=LiveScience/> and vaginal infections.<ref name="Guardian-1"/><ref name=Gunter/>

Society and culture

Marketing

Vaginal steaming is marketed with pseudoscientific notions of "balancing" female hormones and "revitalizing" the uterus or vagina.<ref name=LiveScience/><ref name="Guardian-1"> Robinson, Ann,

 Sorry, Gwyneth Paltrow, but steaming your vagina is a bad idea Full text, 
 The Guardian, 
  
 30 January 2015,

</ref><ref name=Gunter> ,

 Gwyneth Paltrow says steam your vagina, an OB/GYN says don’t Full text, 
 Dr. Jen Gunter Wielding the Lasso of Truth, 
  
 27 January 2015,

</ref> It is also marketed as "cleaning" the vagina, which it does not do.<ref name="Guardian-1"/><ref name=Gunter/>

In an article for Goop, actress Gwyneth Paltrow in reviewing a Santa Monica, California spa, described several of their treatments and said of one, "[y]ou sit on what is essentially a mini-throne, and a combination of infrared and mugwort steam cleanses your uterus, et al".<ref name="Guardian-1"/><ref name="a">

No, Gwenyth Paltrow, Vaginas don't need to be steam cleaned(link). LiveScience. LiveScience.



</ref> A report in The Guardian responded by debunking the claim of the heat, steam, and mugwort having any benefit, and noted it could be harmful.<ref name="Guardian-1"/>

A 2017 survey by Vandenburg and Braun<ref name=VB> ,

 'Basically, it's sorcery for your vagina': unpacking Western representations of vaginal steaming , 
 Culture, Health & Sexuality,

</ref> (taking as its title one observer's characterization – "Basically, it's sorcery for your vagina")<ref> Beck, Laura Hopper,

 I Went To A Spa For My Uterus And This Is My Story Full text, 
 Fast Company, 
  
 January 27, 2015,

</ref> analyzed "90 online items related to vaginal steaming", including from newspapers and magazines, blogs, and providers of the practice. They identified a general theme, that of the "self-improving woman", which they argue fits in perfectly with modern constructions of what scholarship has called the "neoliberal" woman, a woman who, free of outside influences, seeks to optimize herself and her health (see Healthism). Within that theme, they found four attitudes that promote healthist practices such as vaginal steaming:

  1. The female body is inherently defective and dirty, and deteriorates with age: "the female body [is] situated within this biologically-determinist narrative of inevitable decline" which can be resisted.<ref name="VB" group=""></ref>: 475 
  2. Western medicine and bodily care (including tampon use, for instance) make the female genitalia unnaturally full of toxins, a process that can be reversed by the natural practice of vaginal steaming (the authors note that such accounts are themselves littered with language derived from Western medicine—"symptoms", "decline", "ailments").<ref name="VB" group=""></ref>: 476 
  3. Health enhancement, and the optimization of the body, specifically fertility and sexual pleasure, with much of the language used by advertisers of spas focusing on "maintenance" and "restoration", reinforcing both healthism and the fetishization of youth; vaginal steaming, it is claimed, improves marriages and the male libido. According to the authors, "the sexual and reproductive enhancement focus mirrors the two modes through which Western societies have traditionally valued women: sexual availability for men (within marriage) and childbearing".<ref name="VB" group=""></ref>: 478 
  4. The pampering of the self-assured woman, a luxury as well as a right that they have earned, with advertising playing on the "reawakening" of the "inner goddess": "To awaken your inner goddess, please call us at..." The idea is that the practice allows a woman to reach her true potential, her true self.<ref name="VB" group=""></ref>: 479 

The authors conclude that vaginal steaming is one of many practices that fit "neoliberal, postfeminist and healthist ideologies, colliding with pervasive sociocultural understandings of the female reproductive body both as core of womanhood and as 'embodied pathology'".<ref name="VB" group=""></ref>: 480 

References

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