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WOMEN'S HEALTH | PELVIC FLOOR

Imagine Getting Through an Entire Day Without Thinking About Your Bladder Once.

How a 61-year-old woman from Shropshire went from seven years of daily pads to dancing at her granddaughter's birthday party. And the thing nobody in the medical system ever told her.

Not planning the route by the nearest toilets before you leave the house.
 

Not sitting in the aisle seat just in case.
 

Not laughing with your hand pressed quietly to your thigh.
 

Not calculating, two hours later, whether you drank too much water before you left.
 

Not leaving early. Not making an excuse. Not missing the part you actually wanted to be there for.
 

Not a dramatic day. Not a special occasion. A Tuesday. A shopping trip. A coffee with a friend where you are actually present for the conversation instead of half-listening and half-calculating.
 

Maybe, eventually, a day where you buy the underwear you stopped buying years ago. Not because you need to. Because you can.
 

Just a day. A normal day. The kind you used to have without thinking about it.
 

That is what Margaret from Shropshire described when she wrote to us, eight weeks after she started using the PelviFix Pro.
 

She did not write to say she had stopped leaking.
 

She wrote to tell us about a birthday party.

"I Stayed the Whole Time. I Danced. I Didn't Think About It Once."

Margaret is 61. She had worn a pad every single day for seven years.
 

In those seven years, she had done the kegels. Every morning, without fail, the way she had been told. 

She had seen a physiotherapist twice, paid out of pocket, driven forty minutes each way. She had sat in her GP's office twice.
 

The first time she was told it was normal for her age. The second time, a different GP, she was told to learn to hold it better. 

That was the full extent of the advice. Learn to hold it better. She drove home and did not cry until she was inside.
 

She stopped arguing. She stopped expecting anything to be different. She quietly made peace with the fact that this was just her life now.
 

She planned her days around toilets. She chose her seat at restaurants by how quickly she could reach the bathroom if she needed to. 

She left her book club early on the evenings when she did not trust herself to stay. 

She stopped going to her walking group. She told nobody. Because what was there to say that would not simply confirm what the doctors had already told her. 

That this was age. That this was normal. That this was the deal. 
 

And underneath that acceptance, something she did not say out loud even to herself.

That it was getting worse. That three years earlier she had needed a pad for certain moments. Now she needed one all day. 

That somewhere ahead of her, if nothing changed, was a place she did not want to reach.
 

She did not say that. She planned her days around toilets instead.
 

Then her granddaughter turned four.

"I went to the party determined to stay as long as I could," she told us. "I had my bag. I knew where the bathroom was. I had done all the things I always do."
 

"But somewhere in the middle of it, I realised I had stopped thinking about it. I was just there. I was dancing with her to one of those ridiculous children's songs and I wasn't thinking about anything. I was just dancing."
 

"I cried on the way home. But the good kind. The kind where you've remembered something you didn't realise you'd lost."

Why This Keeps Happening to Women Who Do Everything Right

If Margaret's story sounds familiar, it is because it is not unusual.
 

Not the leaking. Not the planning. Not the years of kegels that produced nothing. 

Not the GP who said normal for your age and moved on. 

Not the other GP who said learn to hold it better and closed the file.
 

What is unusual is that Margaret found out why it happened. And why things changed.

 

Most women never get either.
 

Here is what you have almost certainly never been told. 

Not by your GP. 

Not by the physiotherapist who recommended kegels. 

Not by the women's health articles that repeat the same advice year after year.
 

Your pelvic floor does not work alone.

Every muscle in your body depends on a nerve signal. 

A communication pathway that runs from your brain through your spinal cord into the muscle tissue.

When that pathway is healthy, the signal arrives cleanly. 

The muscle contracts fully. The contraction is strong enough to matter.

After menopause, that pathway weakens.

 

The signal still leaves your brain when you try to do a kegel. You feel yourself trying. 

But the signal arrives at the muscle too faint to generate a real therapeutic contraction. 

Too faint to rebuild damaged muscle fibre. 

Too faint to make a difference, no matter how consistently or how correctly you do the exercise.

This is the thing nobody says out loud.

You can kegel a hundred times a day for three years and not rebuild a single damaged muscle fibre.

Not because you are doing them wrong. 

Not because you are not trying hard enough. 

But because the signal carrying the instruction from your brain to your muscle is no longer strong enough to generate the contraction that healing requires.

It is physiology. 

Not failure. 

Not age. 

Not something you brought on yourself.

The kegels were never going to work. Not because kegels do not work in principle. 

But because kegels depend on a signal that menopause had already weakened before you started doing them.

And here is the part that matters most. 

Every month that passes without addressing the actual cause is a month the pathway weakens further. 

A month the muscle atrophies a little more. Women who start with occasional leaks find themselves wearing a pad all day. 

Women who wear a pad all day find themselves reaching for something heavier. 

The trajectory is not stable. It moves in one direction without intervention.

That is not a scare tactic. 

That is what the women in the data tell us, in their own words, from their own lives. 

It is slowly getting worse. That is the sentence that comes up again and again. Slowly. Getting. Worse.

The Technology That Was Always the Answer. Just Never Accessible.

The clinical answer to this exact problem has existed for years.
 

It is called EMS. Electrical muscle stimulation.
 

EMS does not ask your brain to send a signal to your pelvic floor. 

It bypasses the weakened nerve pathway entirely. 

It delivers a calibrated micro-current directly to the pelvic floor muscle. 

The muscle contracts involuntarily. 

Therapeutically. 

Repeatedly. 

Regardless of what the nerve pathway can or cannot carry.

 

The contraction happens whether or not your brain can generate a strong enough signal to cause it.

The muscle rebuilds from the inside out.

 

Think of it this way. 

Trying to rebuild a pelvic floor with kegels after the nerve pathway has weakened is like trying to charge a phone with a cable that has lost most of its conductivity. 

The intent is there. 

The action is there. 

The result never arrives. 

EMS bypasses the cable entirely. 

It delivers the charge directly.

This is the mechanism behind the Emsella chair.

 

The clinical device used in private women's health clinics across the UK. 

Women who have used the Emsella describe it in words that are remarkably:
 

''Consistent.''

''Life-changing.''

''I wish I had known sooner.'' 

''I stopped expecting anything to work and then this did.''

Women who had worn pads for years. 

Women who had done everything their doctors recommended. 

A course of Emsella treatment at a private clinic costs between Β£1,500 and Β£2,500. That means:

Six appointments. 

Thirty minutes each. 

Travel both ways every time

Scheduling around clinic hours

The geographic luck of living near a clinic that offers it.

For most women, that combination of cost and access has made it simply impossible. Not a choice. 

A closed door.

For years, the technology worked. The women who needed it could not reach it.
 

That changed.

What Margaret Actually Used

Eighteen months ago, Margaret read a post from another woman her age in an online health forum.

The woman mentioned something she was using at home. 

Not a kegel app. 

Not a small biofeedback sensor. 

Something that used the same EMS micro-current principle as the Emsella chair, designed for home use.

 

Margaret was sceptical. She had reasons to be. She had tried things before. 

A small device she had ordered online three years earlier that had done nothing, that still sat in a drawer somewhere, that had cost more than she wanted to remember. 

 

But the woman on the forum described something that sounded categorically different. 

Not a device that measured her voluntary contractions and turned them into an app exercise. 

A device with 8 internal electrode plates. 

One that delivered actual EMS current directly to the pelvic floor muscle. 

One that generated the involuntary therapeutic contraction that the Emsella generated in clinic, not a measurement of the voluntary contraction that her weakened nerve pathway could no longer produce reliably.
 

She researched it for two weeks. She read everything she could find about EMS and pelvic floor rehabilitation. 

She compared the mechanism to what she understood about the Emsella. 

She asked questions in three different women's health communities.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Then she ordered the PelviFix Pro.

The PelviFix Pro delivers EMS micro-current through an internal electrode array directly to the pelvic floor. It combines that stimulation with 38Β°C therapeutic heat and red light therapy. That means:

Three clinical modes. 

Medical-grade silicone. 

Adjustable intensity levels.

Each session lasts fifteen minutes.

You use it lying down. Your body does the work. 

You do not have to generate the signal your pelvic floor can no longer reliably receive. 

The device generates it for you.

What the First Two Weeks Actually Feel Like

Margaret noticed nothing dramatic in the first week.
 

She had expected either to feel something immediately or to feel nothing at all and assume it had failed. 

What she felt instead was harder to name.
 

Around day nine, she got through a morning without urgency. 

She noticed it only because she realised, at noon, that she had not thought about the toilet since breakfast. 

She wrote it off as coincidence.
 

Around day twelve, she sneezed. 

She had already braced, the way she always did, the way her body had learned to prepare itself automatically after years of needing to. 

But there was nothing to brace for.
 

She stood in the kitchen for a moment not quite understanding what had just happened.
 

That was not a dramatic moment. 

It was a quiet one. 

But it was the moment she understood something had shifted.
 

By week four, the pattern had become consistent enough that she stopped attributing it to luck. 

She went to a coffee morning and did not note where the bathroom was before she sat down. 

She walked around a garden centre for an hour without mapping her route. 

She booked a seat in the middle of the row at a theatre for the first time in six years.
 

And then came the birthday party. And the dancing. And the crying on the way home.

"It doesn't feel like a treatment working," she said. "It feels like remembering who you were."

For Women Who Have Tried Things Before

I genuinely did not think anything would work anymore.

"Four years of kegels, two physiotherapists, two devices in a drawer. My GP told me to learn to hold it better. I ordered the PelviFix Pro expecting nothing. By week two I sneezed and nothing happened. I stood in my kitchen not quite understanding what had just changed."

Linda T. / 62, Nottingham

We want to address something directly.

If you have a drawer that contains one or more devices you bought, tried, and set aside when nothing changed, you have a reason to be cautious. 

That drawer represents real money and real hope that did not pay off. 

We understand why that creates scepticism. We are not asking you to ignore it.

We are asking you to understand one distinction that changes everything.

 

Most consumer pelvic floor devices are biofeedback sensors. They measure voluntary contractions. They track the effort you are already making. 

They require the same weakened nerve signal that is already failing to produce the therapeutic contraction you need. 

They are measuring a problem, not treating it. 

They assume the nerve pathway is intact. 

For women after menopause, that assumption is precisely the problem.

The PelviFix Pro does not measure what you are doing. It generates what your body can no longer reliably generate on its own. 

It delivers calibrated EMS micro-current directly to the pelvic floor muscle via an internal electrode array, bypassing the nerve signal problem entirely.
 

These are not variations of the same category. They are different categories. 

Comparing the PelviFix Pro to a Bluetooth kegel tracker is like comparing a physiotherapy electrical stimulation machine to a fitness app that reminds you to stretch. 

Same body area. Fundamentally different mechanism. Fundamentally different outcome.

If what you tried before did not use internal EMS electrodes to generate involuntary therapeutic muscle contractions, it was not doing what the PelviFix Pro does.

 

 

 

 

What failed you before was not in the same category.

Rebuild your pelvic floor at home

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EMS micro-current bypasses the weakened nerve pathway

38Β°C therapeutic heat relaxes and restores blood flow

Red light therapy supports cellular tissue repair

15 minutes per session. Lying down. Fully passive.

For women with prolapse or rectocele: the PelviFix Pro was designed with post-menopausal and post-surgical pelvic anatomy in mind. It is compatible with prolapse and rectocele. If you have concerns specific to your history, please speak with your GP before beginning.

What This Actually Costs

A course of Emsella treatment at a private clinic costs between Β£1,500 and Β£2,500. 

Six appointments. Travel both ways each time. Taking time away from your day six separate occasions.
 

For women outside major cities, add the cost and exhaustion of significant travel.

Seven years of daily pads costs, conservatively, somewhere between Β£800 and Β£1,400. 

And that number grows every year you continue.

A single course of pelvic floor physiotherapy, if you can access it, costs between Β£150 and Β£300 per session. 

Most women need six to twelve sessions before seeing meaningful change, if they see it at all. 

The nearest practitioner may be an hour away. Or two hours. Or, as one woman put it, 250 miles.

The PelviFix Pro is a fraction of any of those figures. It is a one-time purchase. You use it at home. 

You lie down for fifteen minutes and let it work. 

You do not schedule six appointments. You do not drive anywhere. You do not sit in a waiting room.

And it comes with a 90-day money-back guarantee.

Not because we want to lower your expectations. 

Because we are certain enough in what the PelviFix Pro does that if it does not work for you after consistent use, the right thing is for you to pay nothing.

If after ninety days you have not experienced measurable improvement, contact us and we will refund you in full. 

No forms designed to exhaust your patience. No requirement to prove anything. You tried it.

It did not work for you. You pay nothing.
 

That is the only honest way we know how to ask a woman who has been disappointed before to try one more thing.

One Last Thing

Your GP told you this is what getting older looks like.
 

One told you it was normal for your age. 

Another told you to learn to hold it better. 

And so you did what women do when the system fails them. 

You adapted. You planned. You left early. You chose the aisle seat. 

You stopped going to the walking group. You told nobody.

Margaret spent seven years doing exactly that. 

She was not failing to try hard enough. 

She was trying with the wrong information and the wrong tools, in a system that had nothing useful left to offer her.

She was wrong to believe nothing would change. 

Not because she lacked determination. 

Because nobody told her the truth about what was actually happening and what could actually help.

Seven years. 

That is what waiting looked like for her. Not a decision to wait. 

Just a series of days that became weeks that became years, each one a little worse than the one before, until the trajectory she had not wanted to name became impossible to ignore.

You do not have to measure your wait in years.
 

The technology that for years was locked behind a Β£2,000 clinic course and six appointments and the geographic luck of living near a private women's health centre is not locked any more.

You do not have to plan around toilets. You do not have to choose the aisle seat. 

You do not have to leave early or laugh carefully or stay home from the things you used to go to without a second thought.
 

You are allowed to want more than this.
 

And now, wanting more is not just a feeling. It is fifteen minutes, lying down, at home.
 

The granddaughter's birthday party is already booked.
 

The only question is whether you will be there. And whether you will stay for the dancing.

4.64 out of 5 β€” Based on 2,004 verified purchases

Women who got their life back.

Real results from real women. No filters. No scripts. Just what happened when they stopped managing and started fixing.

RESULTS

4.9

Title

EASE OF USE

4.8

Title

COMFORT

4.8

Title

VALUE VS. CLINIC

4.8

Title

WOULD RECOMMEND

4.8

Think about it: every day you skip, your pelvic floor stays exactly where it is. 

Every day you use it, the muscles rebuild.


Women using the PelviFix Pro daily report:

Week 1: A subtle but unmistakable difference when you sneeze 

Week 2: Urgency you can actually control for the first time 

Week 3: You forget to wear a pad. And nothing happens. 

Week 4: You start planning your day around what you want to do. Not where the nearest toilet is.

 

The difference between managed symptoms and actually fixed? Not missing a session.

 

Here's what you need to know: we are nearly sold out. Several women have this in their cart right now. 

 

Our last batch was gone in under two weeks. Why the shortage? 

 

The medical-grade silicone and EMS electrode components we use are manufactured to clinical specification. Supply is limited by design. 

 

We will not cut corners on what goes inside your body. When this batch is gone, it's gone.

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