| Literature DB >> 31635040 |
Chen Wu1, Kaikai Xue2, Mary H Palmer3.
Abstract
This scoping review explores the state of science regarding women's toileting behaviors, gaps in knowledge, and areas for future research. Online databases were searched to identify papers published in English between January 2010 through July 2019; the search identified 25 articles. The Toileting Behaviors-Women's Elimination Behaviors scale has been published in four validated language versions and used in 17 of the 25 studies. The most frequent behaviors include concern about public toilet cleanliness, delaying urination when busy or away from home, and using different toileting postures at and away from home. Determinants of toileting behaviors include environmental factors, chronic health conditions, and cognitive/psychological factors. Associations were found between toileting behaviors and lower urinary tract symptoms and between toileting postures and uroflowmetric parameters and post-void residual volume. Strategies that address modifiable determinants of toileting behaviors should be developed and tested in future research. Furthermore, little is known about the toileting behaviors and bladder health in older women and women from developing countries. Rigorous studies are needed to better understand the underlying mechanisms of toileting behaviors, the nature of associations between toileting behaviors and lower urinary tract symptoms, and effects of the environment on women's toileting behaviors.Entities:
Keywords: female; lower urinary tract symptoms; posture; urinary bladder; urination
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31635040 PMCID: PMC6843934 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16204000
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram for inclusion of articles in scoping review.
Figure 2Numbers and percentages of studies where Toileting Behavior–Women’s Elimination Behaviors (TB–WEB scale was used, by country (n, %).
Toileting Behaviors of Women, Measured Using TB–WEB Scale (n = 17).
| First Author (Year) | Sample | Version of TB–WEB | Domain (Number of Items): Scores of Domains within | Scaling Format of Item Frequency | Psychometric Characteristics | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reliability | Validity | |||||
| Zhou (2019) | College/university students | 22-item Chinese version | Premature voiding (5) | ‘Often’ and ‘always’ were summarized as habitual behavior. | Cronbach’s alpha for each dimension was more than 0.7. Overall Cronbach’s alpha was 0.80. | N/A |
| Xu (2019) [ | Operating room nurses. Males were included in the sample. | 15-item Chinese (male/female) | Both male and female participants: | Never/rarely | Not reported | N/A |
| Wang (2011) | Employees of a large university and academic medical center | 18-item English version | Premature voiding (5): 1.75 ± 0.11 | N/A | Cronbach’s alpha: | Construct validity: Five subscales explained 67% variance of latent toileting behaviors. |
| Palmer (2015) | Advanced practice providers | 19-item English version | Premature voiding (5) | Never | Not reported | N/A |
| Palmer (2018) | Employees of a large academic medical center | 22-item English version | Premature voiding (5) | ‘Often/always’ was regarded as having the behavior, otherwise, not having the behavior. | Not reported | N/A |
| Zhou (2018) | Employees of a large academic medical center | 22-item English version | Premature voiding (5) | ‘Often/always’ was regarded as having the behavior, otherwise, not having the behavior. | Not reported | N/A |
| Reynolds | Full-time working women | 19-item English version | Premature voiding (5) | ‘Often’ and ‘always’ were summarized as habitual behavior. | Not reported | N/A |
| Angelini (2019) | Private college undergraduates | 18-item English version | Premature voiding (5) | ‘Rarely’, ‘sometimes’, ‘often’, and ‘always’ were summarized as having the behavior. | Cronbach’s alpha: | Construct validity: Four subscales explained 72.8% variance of latent toileting behavior. |
| Kowalik (2019) | Living in a community | 24-item English version | Convenience voiding (5) | ‘Sometimes’, ‘often’, and ‘always’ were regarded as having the behavior, otherwise, not having the behavior. | Not reported | N/A |
| Liu (2012) [ | Living in a community and reported having urinary incontinence | 14-item Chinese version | Premature voiding (4) | N/A | Cronbach’s alpha: | Construct validity: Four subscales explained 79% variance of latent toileting behaviors. |
| Xu (2016) [ | Clinical nurses from three hospitals | 17-item Chinese version | Premature voiding (4): 2.30 ± 0.92 | Never/rarely | Not reported | N/A |
| Wan (2017) | Clinical nurses | 17-item Chinese version | Premature voiding (4): 2.30 ± 0.92 | Never | Not reported | N/A |
| Willis-Gray (2017) | Patients in a urogynecology | 22-item English version, with 4 pictorial images | Premature voiding (5) | Never, rarely, or never/rarely | Not reported | N/A |
| Sjogren (2017) | University students | 19-item Swedish version | Premature voiding (5): 2.0 ± 0.8 | Never | Cronbach’s alpha: | Construct validity: Five subscales explained 66% variance of latent toileting behaviors. |
| Xu (2017) [ | Participants from an endocrinology department in one hospital who had Type 2 diabetes mellitus. Men were included in the sample. | 15-item Chinese (male/female) | Both male and female participants: | Never/rarely | Cronbach’s alpha: | N/A |
| Xu (2018) [ | Participants from an endocrinology department in one hospital who had overactive bladder and Type 2 diabetes mellitus. Men were included in the sample. | 15-item Chinese (male/female) | Both male and female participants: | Never/rarely | Not reported | N/A |
| So (2019) | Participants aged 50 years and over who had urinary incontinence | 17-item Korean version | Premature voiding (5) | N/A | Cronbach’s alpha: | Construct validity: Five subscales explained 74.24% variance of the latent toileting behavior. |
Note: N/A indicates not applicable.