Most early yeast infections can be slowed or stopped with prompt antifungal treatment plus a few key hygiene moves, but anything severe, recurrent, or unclear should be checked by a clinician for a proper diagnosis and prescription.

Quick Scoop

  • Use an over‑the‑counter antifungal (like clotrimazole or miconazole cream or suppositories) as soon as you recognize classic symptoms such as itching, thick white discharge, and irritation.
  • Keep the vulva dry and cool: change out of wet clothes quickly, avoid tight synthetic underwear, and sleep in loose cotton or no underwear.
  • Skip scented soaps, douches, “feminine washes,” and vaginal deodorants, which can disrupt the normal bacteria–yeast balance and actually worsen or trigger infections.
  • Consider adding probiotics (yogurt with live cultures or oral probiotic supplements with Lactobacillus) to help support healthy vaginal flora over time, especially if you recently took antibiotics.
  • Avoid high‑sugar diets and excess processed carbs while you are symptomatic, because yeast thrives on sugar.

What You Can Do Today

  1. Start a short OTC antifungal course (1‑, 3‑, or 7‑day products; follow the package carefully).
  1. Gently wash the vulva with lukewarm water only; pat dry, don’t rub.
  1. Switch to loose cotton underwear and avoid panty liners unless absolutely necessary.
  1. If you’re on antibiotics or get frequent infections, add daily probiotics and yogurt with live cultures.
  1. Avoid sex or at least avoid irritants like flavored/scented lubricants until symptoms are gone.

Things To Avoid (Important)

  • Inserting garlic, harsh essential oils, vinegar, or undiluted tea tree oil into the vagina; these can burn or damage tissue and make things worse.
  • Repeatedly self‑treating if you are not 100% sure it is a yeast infection, because BV, STIs, and UTIs can look similar but need different treatment.
  • Ignoring symptoms that last more than about a week, keep coming back, or are accompanied by fever, pelvic pain, or unusual bleeding.

When To See A Doctor

  • First‑ever suspected yeast infection, or you’re not sure what it is.
  • Symptoms that don’t improve after a full course of OTC treatment.
  • Four or more infections per year, pregnancy, diabetes, a weakened immune system, or very severe redness, swelling, or cracks in the skin.

Bottom note: This is general educational information and not a substitute for an in‑person exam. If you are in significant discomfort, pregnant, or have any doubts about the diagnosis, getting checked quickly is the safest way to “stop” a yeast infection early.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.