School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK.
St Bartholomew's Hospital, Barts Health NHS Trust, West Smithfield, London EC1A 7BE, UK.
Age Ageing. 2024 Jun 1;53(6). doi: 10.1093/ageing/afae126.
Incontinence is a common, distressing condition, most prevalent in older people. There is an unmet need for effective interventions to support continence. This review focuses on non-pharmacological interventions to reduce incontinence among homebound older people. Aim: to identify interventions with potential to be delivered by care workers, nurses or family members in a person's home.
Multiple databases were searched until 15 September 2023 for randomised controlled trials reporting home-based interventions for incontinence for older people (≥65 years) living at home. Two reviewers independently screened titles, abstracts and papers against inclusion criteria, then assessed for the Risk of Bias (RoB2). A third reviewer resolved the discrepancies. Primary data were extracted and synthesised.
A full-text review of 81 papers identified seven eligible papers (1996-2022, all USA), including n = 636 participants (561 women and 75 men). Two studies focusing on multicomponent behavioural interventions showed benefit, as did one study of transcutaneous tibial nerve stimulation self-administered through electrode-embedded socks. Three, which included cognitively impaired people, reported improvement with toileting assistance programmes, but the effects were not all significant. Results were inconclusive from a study examining the effects of fluid intake adjustments. Interventions were delivered by nurses, three in collaboration with family caregivers. No faecal incontinence interventions met the criteria.
There is scant evidence for continence supporting interventions delivered in older people's own homes. With an ageing population often reliant on family or social care workers well-placed to support continence promotion and policy drives for services to support older people remaining at home, this evidence gap needs addressing.
尿失禁是一种常见且令人痛苦的疾病,在老年人中更为普遍。对于有效的干预措施以支持尿失禁患者的治疗存在未满足的需求。本综述重点关注可由家庭护理人员、护士或家庭成员在家中实施的非药物干预措施,以减少居家老年人的尿失禁。目的:确定有潜力通过护理人员、护士或家庭成员在患者家中实施的干预措施。
我们检索了多个数据库,截至 2023 年 9 月 15 日,以获取针对居家老年人(≥65 岁)尿失禁的基于家庭的干预措施的随机对照试验报告。两名评审员独立筛选标题、摘要和论文是否符合纳入标准,然后评估风险偏倚(RoB2)。第三位评审员解决了差异。提取并综合了主要数据。
对 81 篇论文进行全文审查,确定了 7 篇符合条件的论文(1996-2022 年,均来自美国),包括 636 名参与者(561 名女性和 75 名男性)。两项专注于多组分行为干预的研究显示出获益,一项经皮 tibial 神经刺激自我管理通过嵌入电极的袜子进行的研究也是如此。三项包括认知障碍患者的研究报告了使用厕所辅助计划的改善,但并非所有效果均具有统计学意义。研究评估液体摄入调整的效果时,结果并不确定。干预措施由护士实施,其中 3 项与家庭护理人员合作。没有针对粪便失禁的干预措施符合标准。
在家中为老年人提供支持尿失禁的干预措施的证据很少。随着人口老龄化,越来越多的人依赖家庭或社会护理人员,他们有能力支持促进尿失禁患者的治疗,并推动为支持希望居家的老年人提供服务的政策,因此,需要解决这一证据空白。