Teunissen Doreth, van Weel Chris, Lagro-Janssen Toine
Department of General Practice, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Br J Gen Pract. 2005 Oct;55(519):776-82.
Only a small proportion of older people with urinary incontinence seek help, despite the availability of adequate treatment.
To ascertain the patient- and disease-specific factors that determine whether medical care for urinary incontinence is sought by independently living older people with urinary incontinence.
Qualitative and quantitative analyses of interview data.
All independently-living older patients aged 60 years or over from nine family practices involved in the Nijmegen Monitoring Project.
All the independently-living patients aged 60 years or over with uncomplicated urinary incontinence were interviewed at home using the Protection, Amount, Frequency, Adjustment, Body image (PRAFAB) assessment tool, the Incontinence Impact Questionnaire, and the Urogenital Distress Inventory (UDI).
In total, 56 men and 314 women were interviewed. Half of the patients had sought help from a GP. Help-seeking was related to the duration of symptoms, the severity of incontinence, the impact experienced emotionally and/or physically, and the presence of concomitant symptoms, particularly of urinary obstruction. Only the presence of incontinence-related complaints as listed on the UDI (odds ratio = 2.74, 95% confidence interval = 1.42 to 5.29) was a significant predictor of help-seeking. Most of the patients who had not sought help did not do so because they considered incontinence as not very serious, or because of a lack of knowledge about cause and treatment options - comments such as 'incontinence is age-related', and 'there is nothing that can be done about incontinence', were reported. Major reasons for seeking help were perceived increase in severity or distress and the need for incontinence materials.
Seeking help is particularly determined by the impact experienced and presence of concomitant symptoms. When patients perceive their incontinence as not very serious or distressing and have a lack of knowledge about cause and treatment options, they usually do not seek help. When they perceive an increase in severity or distress or require incontinence materials, they usually do seek help.
尽管有足够的治疗方法,但只有一小部分尿失禁老年人寻求帮助。
确定决定独立生活的尿失禁老年人是否寻求尿失禁医疗护理的患者和疾病特定因素。
访谈数据的定性和定量分析。
参与奈梅亨监测项目的九个家庭诊所中所有60岁及以上独立生活的老年患者。
使用保护、尿量、频率、调整、身体形象(PRAFAB)评估工具、尿失禁影响问卷和泌尿生殖系统困扰量表(UDI),对所有60岁及以上独立生活且患有单纯性尿失禁的患者进行家访访谈。
共访谈了56名男性和314名女性。一半的患者曾向全科医生寻求帮助。寻求帮助与症状持续时间、尿失禁严重程度、情感和/或身体上的影响以及伴随症状的存在有关,特别是尿路梗阻。UDI上列出的与尿失禁相关的主诉(优势比=2.74,95%置信区间=1.42至5.29)是寻求帮助的唯一显著预测因素。大多数未寻求帮助的患者未这样做是因为他们认为尿失禁不太严重,或者因为对病因和治疗选择缺乏了解——报告了诸如“尿失禁与年龄有关”以及“对于尿失禁无能为力”等评论。寻求帮助的主要原因是感觉严重程度或困扰增加以及需要尿失禁用品。
寻求帮助尤其取决于所经历的影响和伴随症状的存在。当患者认为他们的尿失禁不太严重或令人困扰,并且对病因和治疗选择缺乏了解时,他们通常不会寻求帮助。当他们感觉到严重程度或困扰增加或需要尿失禁用品时,他们通常会寻求帮助。