The first thing you need to do is to be alert for the development of vaginitis. You need to go to the hospital as soon as possible to register with a gynecologist who will check the routine leucorrhoea to see if there are any abnormalities in the routine leucorrhoea and to confirm if there is vaginitis. What you need to look for in a routine leucorrhoea is cleanliness, the presence of mold, trichomonas, and the presence of bacterial vaginosis. A common manifestation of vaginitis is a cleanliness of more than three degrees with positive trichomonas or positive mycobacteria or positive BV. Since different vaginitis are treated differently, there is no generic medication to treat all vaginitis and the appropriate treatment plan needs to be chosen based on the results of the routine leukorrhea. If the vaginitis is mycosis, you usually need to use clotrimazole vaginally. In case of poor cleanliness, trichomoniasis and bacterial vaginosis, vaginal topical metronidazole vaginal effervescent tablets or metronidazole vaginal gel is needed for treatment. The course of treatment is usually one week, and three days after stopping the medication, you have to go to the hospital to recheck the routine leucorrhoea to see if it turns to normal.