Dolly Doctor has been around a long time. It was an integral part of Dolly magazine when it launched in late 1970 and has never floundered.
The Q&A section was always the backbone of Dolly Doctor, while the section itself went through various incarnations, including growing in size and number of feature articles, being a sealed section, then not again.
I’ve been the medical writer of Dolly Doctor Q&A for 23 years, half the magazine’s life and can vouch for the authenticity of the questions (the magazine did not make them up contrary to popular belief).
I also knew the responsibility felt by all the editors I met towards providing readers with credible, sound advice from genuine health professionals. Clinical psychologists and medical specialists and health educators have also contributed to articles and to Q&A columns over the time that I have.
When I started writing the column, girls wrote handwritten letters and posted them in, several hundred a year in the early to mid-1990s.
In the mid-2000s, the column received about 30,000 emails a year. I know this because I asked the editors of the day if I could read them all. It took many hours but gave me privileged insights into the breadth of health and relationship concerns.
In sharing these insights over the years I hope to have had some impact on the way health professionals and teachers understand adolescent girls, and to stop pathologising sexuality and other aspects of healthy development. I only ever answered up to 10 questions a month, except for the years when we also included up to five questions from boys a month – an initiative I was involved with and remain proud of.