Chapters Transcript Video Dr. Josh Cohn at Temple Health. Not only can we react to what we find as far as diagnosis, but we can do a better job at predicting which therapies are going to be most likely to work Joshua cone. I'm an associate professor of Urology here at Temple Health. I'm a urologist who is trained in the advanced care of urinary symptoms in both men and women. I have an expertise in female pelvic medicine and reconstructive surgery. The most common conditions that I treat our pelvic organ, prolapse, stress, urinary incontinence are leaking with coughing or sneezing or other physical activity, overactive bladder and it's neurogenesis, bladder but unique about our practices, advanced diagnostic techniques called video aerodynamics where we use a combination of pressure sensing and X ray studies that allows us to determine as much as we possibly can and then you can develop targeted therapies. Every patient needs an individualized care plan and that starts with sitting down, listening to them, figuring out what bothers them and what their goals are. And many times we're successful without them having to go so far and may just be a medicine, It may be physical therapy and maybe a minor office based procedure. But what makes our approach unique is that when those more common therapies are not working, we can move to the next phase and continue to offer treatments that simple, more common options don't effectively address so at Temple Health, I have an incredible team of doctors that I work with that's really sets us apart as far as what we can offer patients, a patient who comes in with a very challenging condition may need a little bit of my expertise and a little bit of my colleagues expertise in order to have the optimal outcome, and that collaborative relationship is simply not something you can get everywhere. The most exciting thing for me at work is a smile on my patient's face, and it doesn't matter to me really whether that has come because they've had an excellent response to medication or if that comes, because we've done a collaborative, difficult, challenging surgery that has had a good outcome. I'm happy and I'm excited when my patients are happy and excited. Created by