Literature DB >> 30205713

From stigma to the spotlight: A need for patient-centred incontinence care.

D Wayne Taylor1, Jacqueline J Cahill2.   

Abstract

Incontinence is not a single disorder but a family of related conditions with different etiologies and treatments; it is a chronic disability that carries an enormous stigma. In few disorder/treatment pairings, there is the need to reinvent care more urgent and clear than in the area of incontinence. Patient-centred care has been realized to improve outcomes, quality of care, and patient satisfaction while concurrently reducing healthcare costs. To improve continence care and move it away from "cleaning up accidents" to a patient-centred care model, in which the disorder is managed to best practice guidelines, does not require investigative or developmental prowess but a simple, concentrated effort to diffuse existing knowledge to close the knowledge gaps, both at the clinical language level for clinical nurses and family physicians, as the gatekeepers to specialist care, and in simplified layperson's language for the healthcare worker, family carer, and person living with incontinence.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30205713     DOI: 10.1177/0840470418798102

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Healthc Manage Forum        ISSN: 0840-4704


  3 in total

1.  Pelvic floor disorders in women who consult primary care clinics: development and validation of case definitions using primary care electronic medical records.

Authors:  Sue Ross; Hilary Fast; Stephanie Garies; Deb Slade; Dave Jackson; Meghan Doraty; Rebecca Miyagishima; Boglarka Soos; Matt Taylor; Tyler Williamson; Neil Drummond
Journal:  CMAJ Open       Date:  2020-05-28

2.  It's About Time: The Temporal Burden of Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms Among Women.

Authors:  Beverly Rosa Williams; Keith Vargo; Diane K Newman; D Yvette Lacoursiere; Elizabeth R Mueller; John Connett; Lisa Kane Low; Aimee S James; Ariana L Smith; Kathryn H Schmitz; Kathryn L Burgio
Journal:  Urol Nurs       Date:  2020 Nov-Dec

3.  'We tend to get pad happy': a qualitative study of health practitioners' perspectives on the quality of continence care for older people in hospital.

Authors:  John Percival; Katharine Abbott; Theresa Allain; Rachel Bradley; Fiona Cramp; Jenny L Donovan; Candy McCabe; Kyra Neubauer; Sabi Redwood; Nikki Cotterill
Journal:  BMJ Open Qual       Date:  2021-04
  3 in total

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