Fultz N H, Herzog A R, Raghunathan T E, Wallace R B, Diokno A C
Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 48106-1248, USA.
J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 1999 Jun;54(6):M299-303. doi: 10.1093/gerona/54.6.m299.
Few studies have investigated the prevalence and severity of urinary incontinence in older African American women. Comparisons of findings with those for older Caucasian women could provide important clues to the etiology of urinary incontinence and be used in planning screening programs and treatment services.
Data are from the first wave of the Asset and Health Dynamics Among the Oldest Old (AHEAD) study. A nationally representative sample of noninstitutionalized adults 70 years of age and older was interviewed. African Americans were oversampled to ensure that there would be enough minority respondents to compare findings across racial groups.
A statistically significant relationship was found between race and urinary incontinence in the previous year: 23.02% of the Caucasian women reported incontinence, compared with 16.17% of the African American women. Other factors that appear to increase the likelihood of incontinence include education, age, functional impairment, sensory impairment, stroke, body mass, and reporting by a proxy. Race was not related to the severity (as measured by frequency) of urine loss among incontinent older women.
This study identifies or confirms important risk factors for self-reported urinary incontinence in a national context, and suggests factors leading to protection from incontinence. Race is found to relate to incontinence, with older African American women reporting a lower prevalence.
很少有研究调查老年非裔美国女性尿失禁的患病率和严重程度。将研究结果与老年白人女性的结果进行比较,可为尿失禁的病因提供重要线索,并用于规划筛查项目和治疗服务。
数据来自“最年长者资产与健康动态”(AHEAD)研究的第一波。对全国具有代表性的70岁及以上非机构化成年人样本进行了访谈。非裔美国人被过度抽样,以确保有足够的少数族裔受访者来比较不同种族群体的研究结果。
发现种族与上一年的尿失禁之间存在统计学上的显著关系:23.02%的白人女性报告有尿失禁,而非裔美国女性为16.17%。其他似乎会增加尿失禁可能性的因素包括教育程度、年龄、功能障碍、感觉障碍、中风、体重以及他人代报情况。种族与失禁老年女性尿液流失的严重程度(以频率衡量)无关。
本研究在全国范围内确定或确认了自我报告尿失禁的重要风险因素,并提出了预防尿失禁的因素。研究发现种族与尿失禁有关,老年非裔美国女性报告患病率较低。