| Literature DB >> 26063179 |
Doreth T A M Teunissen1, Marjolein M Stegeman2, Hans H Bor3, Toine A L M Lagro-Janssen4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Urinary Incontinence (UI) is a common problem in women. The management of UI in primary care is time consuming and suboptimal. Shift of incontinence-care from General Practitioners (GP's) to a nurse practitioner maybe improves the quality of care. The purpose of this observational (pre/post) study is to determine the effectiveness of introducing a nurse practitioner in UI care and to explore women's reasons for not completing treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26063179 PMCID: PMC4464223 DOI: 10.1186/s12894-015-0047-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Urol ISSN: 1471-2490 Impact factor: 2.264
Fig. 1Flow chart study population
Patient characteristics N = 103
| Characteristic | N (%) | Presented morbidity in women (age 45–65) in standard population (CMR)a (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Age mean (SD) | 55.0 (±14.6) | |
| Incontinence | ||
| Stress | 52 (50.5) | |
| Urge | 15 (14.7) | |
| Mixed | 36 (34.8) | |
| Severity of UI (Sandvik score) | ||
| Mild | 11 (10,7) | |
| Moderate | 69 (67,0) | |
| Severe | 22 (21,4) | |
| Very severe | 1 (0,9) | |
| Impact on daily life (IIQ) | ||
| Activities | 1.61 (SD 2.50) | |
| Social | 1.32 (SD 2.62) | |
| Emotional | 1.37 (SD 2.07) | |
| Travelling | 1.76 (SD 2.54) | |
| Impression of severity (PGIS) | ||
| Negligible | 36 (34,9) | |
| Mild | 40 (39,2) | |
| Moderate | 23 (19,8) | |
| Severe | 4 (2,1) | |
| Co-morbidity | ||
| Neurologic disease | 8 (7.5) | (1.9)b |
| COPD/chronic cough/asthma | 10 (9.4) | (6.8) |
| Diabetes mellitus | 8 (7.5) | (4.3) |
| Heart failure | 4 (3.8) | (2,0) |
| Hypertension | 25 (23.6) | (14.5) |
| Obesity | 27 (25.5) | (11.9) |
| Use of medication | ||
| Diuretics | 15 (14.2) | (14.7)c |
| Antidepressants | 12 (11.3) | (2.1)d |
| Other | 29 (27.4) | − |
aCMR: Continuous Morbidity Registration Nijmegen
bTIA/CVA, Parkinson’s disease, epilepsy, cHypertension, heart failure, dDepressive disorder
Fig. 2Number of patients by severity categories (Sandvik) at T0(baseline) and T1(3 months) N=57
Impact on quality of life (IIQ-scores) at T0(baseline) and T1(3 months) N = 48
| Intake (T0) (SD) | 3 months (T1) (SD) | Change | Paired | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IIQ total | 6.05 (8.41) | 3.51 (6.03) | 2.54 | 0.012* |
| IIQ activities | 1.61 (2.50) | 0.88 (1.57) | 0.73 | 0.032* |
| IIQ Social | 1.32 (2.62) | 0.72 (1.72) | 0.60 | 0.030* |
| IIQ emotional | 1.37 (2.07) | 0.74 (1.56) | 0.63 | 0.031* |
| IIQ travelling | 1.76 (2.54) | 1.19 (2.00) | 0.57 | 0.082 |
* P < 0.05
Fig. 3Number of patients by impressed severity categories ( PGIS) at T0 (baseline) and T1 (3 months) N=46
Reasons for non completing treatment N = 33
| Reason | N |
|---|---|
| Lack of improvement, referral to physiotherapist | 5 |
| Lack of improvement, referral to urologist/gynaecologist | 5 |
| Difficulties performing exercises or adherence to the program | 5 |
| Other health problems | 4 |
| Other priorities | 1 |
| Unrealistic expectations of the program | 1 |
| Reasons unknown | 12 |