Huang Alison J, Brown Jeanette S, Kanaya Alka M, Creasman Jennifer M, Ragins Arona I, Van Den Eeden Stephen K, Thom David H
General Internal Medicine Section, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Francisco, CA 94121, USA.
Arch Intern Med. 2006 Oct 9;166(18):2000-6. doi: 10.1001/archinte.166.18.2000.
To identify the factors associated with greater quality-of-life impact, treatment seeking, and use of treatments for urinary incontinence in ethnically diverse older women.
Cross-sectional analysis of a population-based cohort of 2109 middle-aged and older women who were randomly selected from age and race/ethnicity strata. Data were collected by self-report questionnaires and in-person interviews. Multivariable logistic regression was used to identify predictors of high quality-of-life impact (Incontinence Impact Questionnaire [IIQ] score > or =75th percentile), treatment seeking, and use of treatments for incontinence.
More than one fourth (n = 603) of the study participants (including 96 black [16%], 123 Latina [20%], 65 Asian [11%], and 309 white [51%] women) reported weekly incontinence. After clinical severity and other factors were adjusted for, women were more likely to experience high quality-of-life impact if they had nighttime incontinence (odds ratio [OR], 2.5; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.3-4.9), coital incontinence (OR, 1.9; 95% CI, 1.1-3.3), or comorbid fecal incontinence (OR, 2.2; 95% CI, 1.2-4.2). Predictors of treatment seeking included older age (OR, 1.6 per 10 years; 95% CI, 1.2-2.0); higher IIQ score (OR, 4.6 for highest IIQ quartile vs lowest IIQ quartile; 95% CI, 2.5-8.4), and higher household income (OR, 2.6 for income > or = US dollars 100 000/y vs < US dollars 20 000/y; 95% CI, 1.0-2.7).
Clinicians seeking to evaluate the impact of incontinence on women's lives should assess not only the clinical severity of their symptoms but also the specific context in which symptoms occur. The prevalence of treatment seeking for incontinence is low across all ethnic groups, even when women have clinically severe symptoms and access to a health provider.
确定在不同种族的老年女性中,与尿失禁对生活质量影响更大、寻求治疗以及治疗使用相关的因素。
对从年龄和种族/民族分层中随机选取的2109名中老年女性进行基于人群的队列横断面分析。数据通过自我报告问卷和面对面访谈收集。多变量逻辑回归用于确定生活质量影响高(尿失禁影响问卷[IIQ]得分>或=第75百分位数)、寻求治疗以及尿失禁治疗使用的预测因素。
超过四分之一(n = 603)的研究参与者(包括96名黑人[16%]、123名拉丁裔[20%]、65名亚裔[11%]和309名白人[51%]女性)报告每周有尿失禁情况。在调整临床严重程度和其他因素后,如果女性有夜间尿失禁(比值比[OR],2.5;95%置信区间[CI],1.3 - 4.9)、性交时尿失禁(OR,1.9;95% CI,1.1 - 3.3)或合并大便失禁(OR,2.2;95% CI,1.2 - 4.2),她们更有可能经历高生活质量影响。寻求治疗的预测因素包括年龄较大(每10年OR,1.6;95% CI,1.2 - 2.0);IIQ得分较高(最高IIQ四分位数与最低IIQ四分位数相比,OR,4.6;95% CI,2.5 - 8.4),以及家庭收入较高(收入>或=100000美元/年与<20000美元/年相比,OR,2.6;95% CI,1.0 - 2.7)。
试图评估尿失禁对女性生活影响的临床医生不仅应评估症状的临床严重程度,还应评估症状出现的具体背景。即使女性有临床严重症状且可获得医疗服务提供者,所有种族中寻求尿失禁治疗的患病率都很低。