Summer Vaginal and Urinary Health: What Patients Should Know

Summer Vaginal and Urinary Health: What Patients Should Know

Jun 01, 2026

Quick Takeaways

  • Summer routines can make vaginal and urinary symptoms more noticeable.
  • Discharge can be normal, but changes with odor, itching, pain, or unusual color should be evaluated.
  • Yeast infections, BV, UTIs, and other conditions may have overlapping symptoms.
  • Guessing at the cause can lead to the wrong treatment.
  • Your OB-GYN can help identify the cause and recommend appropriate care.

Summer can bring a welcome change of pace, but it can also make vaginal and urinary symptoms more noticeable. Travel, swimming, workouts, heat, wet swimsuits, changes in routine, sexual activity, and dehydration may all affect how your body feels. For many patients, that can lead to questions about discharge, irritation, odor, burning, or whether symptoms could be related to a UTI or vaginal infection.

Summer is the season of travel

At North Shore Associates, we want patients in Wilmette, Glenview to feel comfortable bringing up these concerns. Vaginal and urinary symptoms are common, and they are not something to feel embarrassed about. Talking with your OB-GYN can help you understand what is normal for your body and what may need evaluation.

Vaginal discharge, for example, is a normal part of how the body cleans and protects itself. It may be clear or white, slightly sticky, creamy, or slippery, and it can change during your cycle, pregnancy, birth control use, menopause, or sexual activity. However, discharge that comes with a strong odor, itching, burning, pelvic pain, pain during sex, bleeding between periods, or green, gray, yellow, or cottage cheese-like changes should be discussed with a provider.

Yeast Infection Symptoms

Because yeast infections, bacterial vaginosis, UTIs, sexually transmitted infections, vulvar skin conditions, and hormonal changes can share similar symptoms, self-diagnosis is often inaccurate. A related article offers a helpful summer health overview with more detail on these common concerns. The key message is simple: if something feels different, persistent, or uncomfortable, it is worth asking about.

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