Komorowski Leanne, Chen Bertha
Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford, California, USA.
Health Care Women Int. 2006 Feb;27(2):169-81. doi: 10.1080/07399330500457887.
We sought to understand the perceptions and experiences of Chinese women living with urinary incontinence (UI), a problem that has not yet been characterized in China. We conducted the study using semistructured interviews with 15 women, aged 24-81, diagnosed with UI at the Obstetrics and Gynecology Clinic of Fuzhou General Hospital, Fujian, China. We conducted and analyzed the interviews according to the Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis model. The five core themes we derived from the participants' responses were uncertainty about UI, self-blame, avoidance, emotional isolation, and desire for treatment. The negative impacts of UI we documented, such as limiting exercise and causing embarrassment, demonstrated that UI is a problem for the affected women in China. Our study was limited by the small sample size and the need for additional reliability/validity measures, but we believe it presented a strong foundation and justification for more rigorous research into UI in China.
我们试图了解患有尿失禁(UI)的中国女性的认知和经历,在中国,这一问题尚未得到充分描述。我们在中国福建福州总医院妇产科诊所,对15名年龄在24至81岁、被诊断患有尿失禁的女性进行了半结构化访谈,以此开展研究。我们根据解释现象学分析模型进行访谈并分析。我们从参与者的回答中得出的五个核心主题分别是对尿失禁的不确定、自责、回避、情感孤立以及治疗愿望。我们记录的尿失禁的负面影响,如限制运动和造成尴尬,表明尿失禁在中国是受影响女性面临的一个问题。我们的研究受到样本量小以及需要额外的可靠性/有效性测量的限制,但我们认为它为在中国对尿失禁进行更严格的研究奠定了坚实基础并提供了依据。