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1.
OBJECTIVE: Previous studies have described urinary and fecal incontinence in nursing homes and their separate effects on healthcare utilization. However, little is known about those who are incontinent of both. DESIGN: Retrospective chart review. SETTINGS: Twenty sites in three states PARTICIPANTS: A total of 413 nursing home residents were categorized as having neither fecal nor urinary incontinence (C, n = 114), urinary incontinence only (UI, n = 53), fecal incontinence only (FI, n = 9), or were dually incontinent (DI, n = 237). MEASUREMENTS: Charts were abstracted for sociodemographic information and health status information as well as utilization for the year before the date of abstraction. We then compared these characteristics across groups using ANOVA with pairwise comparisons and multiply adjusted regression. RESULTS: Almost all patients with DI were cognitively and mobility impaired. However, there were no significant differences between the groups with respect to age and number of diagnoses. A diagnosis of stroke was also more common among those with DI compared with C. When examining healthcare utilization in multiply adjusted regression, dually incontinent residents received significantly fewer days of hospital care than those with UI. CONCLUSIONS: Dual incontinence in NH residents is likely to have an important functional component. These residents seem to be treated less aggressively with respect to hospitalization compared with those with UI alone. The reasons for these differences need to be explored further.  相似文献   

2.
Management of urinary incontinence in Veterans Administration nursing homes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Nursing Home Care Units in Veterans Administration Medical Centers across the country were surveyed to determine methods of management of urinary incontinence (UI) in the nursing home (NH) setting. Information was obtained from 90 of the VA NHs on demographic aspects of the NH population, prevalence and severity of urinary and fecal incontinence, common problems encountered, and specific strategies and techniques. Written guidelines for bladder training and catheter care from many of the NHs were analyzed. The results of the survey reinforce the need for research designed to improve the care of the incontinent NH patient.  相似文献   

3.
Although urinary incontinence is recognized as a prevalent, disruptive, and costly problem among nursing home residents, the factors associated with this condition have not been carefully studied. We compared clinical, functional, and psychosocial characteristics of 50 incontinent and 50 continent nursing home residents. In spite of a selection bias due to the informed consent process that resulted in the exclusion of many of the most functionally impaired incontinent residents, the incontinent study participants had significantly greater impairments in functional abilities related to toileting and, on average, took longer to perform a timed series of toileting-related tasks than did the continent comparison group. With the exception of bacteriuria, we did not find incontinence to be associated with most of the major clinical conditions and medications we examined, nor did we find differences in morale and most measures of social activities between the incontinent and continent residents. The data highlight the strong association between functional disability and incontinence in the nursing home setting and suggest that a standard functional assessment of toileting skills could make an important contribution to the care of incontinent residents.  相似文献   

4.
837 geriatric patients were investigated on admission and 6 months later. Relatives and other involved persons were interviewed about background factors of importance for the patient's need of care. Every second male and every third female patient was urinary incontinent and it was evident that this was important for admission to hospital. A close relation was found between urinary incontinence and dementia, but the prevalence of somatic diseases was not greater than among continent patients. Six months after admission patients with urinary incontinence had a higher mortality rate or were living in nursing homes to a greater extent than continent patients. The study suggests that in many geriatric patients urinary incontinence is more closely related to general functional impairment than to specific medical conditions of the uro-genital organs and the central nervous system.  相似文献   

5.
BACKGROUND: Urinary incontinence (UI) is a common but undertreated condition in older adults. The study objective was to determine older patients' characteristics related to communication patterns with their physicians about UI. METHODS: Telephone surveys of a sample of patients age 60 and older who visited a primary care provider (PCP) for any reason within the past 2 months were conducted. Participating physicians included general internists and family physicians from 41 primary care practices located in the 17 counties of northwest North Carolina whose 435 incontinent and 711 continent patients completed the surveys. The main outcome measures were patients' frequency and amount of urinary leakage, being asked about incontinence, and initiating a discussion of incontinence if not asked by their PCP. RESULTS: Age and gender were significant independent predictors of incontinence. PCPs were significantly more likely to assess incontinent women than incontinent men (21% vs 10%, p = .053). The older cohorts of older adults were significantly more likely to be symptomatic for UI than their younger counterparts. However, the younger cohorts were more likely to be screened for incontinence by their physicians. CONCLUSIONS: Despite the publication of guidelines on improving the screening and management of UI, the problem remains common and underdetected in older adults. Physicians don't ask and patients don't tell. Interventions are needed to remind physicians to screen high risk patients and to encourage patients with UI to communicate with their physicians.  相似文献   

6.
Self-reported social and emotional impact of urinary incontinence   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
OBJECTIVE: Incontinence-specific and generic measures of well-being were regressed on potential predictors to identify incontinent respondents at risk for psychosocial distress and to understand the relationship between urinary incontinence (UI) and other determinants of social and emotional status. DESIGN: Survey data were collected May 1994 through April 1996. SETTING: Telephone interviews as a supplement to a nationally representative monthly consumer survey. PARTICIPANTS: Analyses were based on 1,116 continent and 206 incontinent respondents age 40 and older. MEASUREMENTS: Incontinent respondents self-reported the extent to which urine loss restricted social activities or affected their feelings about themselves. All respondents were asked whether they felt depressed, lonely, or sad. Covariates included sex, age, race, education, social desirability, health status, frequency of urine loss, quantity of loss, and urgency. RESULTS: The majority of incontinent respondents reported that urine loss did not restrict activities or diminish self-esteem. Incontinent respondents who were younger, male, less educated, lower in social desirability, in poorer health, or losing greater quantities of urine were more likely to report psychosocial distress, although these correlates were not consistently significant. Compared with continent respondents, significantly higher percentages of incontinent respondents reported feeling depressed, lonely, or sad. In the multivariate models, incontinence retained an independent association with loneliness, but not with sadness or depression. CONCLUSION: Even though the direct psychosocial impact of urine loss may be minor in many cases, UI is associated with a constellation of physical and behavioral factors that can impose a social and emotional burden. This suggests that UI cannot be adequately evaluated or treated without consideration of the patient's overall quality of life.  相似文献   

7.
In order to examine the relative frequency of urinary tract infection (UTI) and bacteriuria among male nursing home patients managed with and without external catheters (EC), we prospectively followed four cohorts of patients (EC worn continuously, N = 30; EC worn at night only, N = 19; incontinent without catheter, N = 13; and continent, N = 30) for a total of 497 patient months at risk. The proportion of patients with EC worn continuously who had at least one episode of bacteriuria (87%) and at least one UTI (40%), and the incidence of UTI (0.08 episodes per patient-month at risk) was significantly higher than among continent or incontinent patients without EC. Patients with EC at night only had an intermediate frequency of these findings. Differences in clinical and functional status characteristics among the four cohorts, in addition to the use of EC, could have contributed to the higher frequencies of bacteriuria and UTI. None of the clinical characteristics we examined were associated with the development of UTI among patients with EC. Further studies are necessary to identify factors associated with UTI among patients who are managed by EC so that effective preventive strategies can be developed and targeted to patients at high risk.  相似文献   

8.
OBJECTIVES: To investigate the prognostic effect of poststroke urinary incontinence (UI) on 1-year outcome in relation to measurements of attention and mental processing speed. DESIGN: Prospective observational study. SETTING: Geriatric department (stroke and rehabilitation unit) in a university hospital. PARTICIPANTS: Two hundred thirty-five previously continent patients (median age 78) with an acute stroke. MEASUREMENTS: Clinical stroke syndromes, subtypes of UI, pre- and poststroke cognitive function and activities of daily living, computerized assessment of attention and processing speed for 110 of the participants, mortality and accommodation at 1 year. RESULTS: One hundred seventy patients remained continent, and 65 developed UI (27 with urge UI, 38 with UI with impaired awareness of the need to void (IA-UI). Patients with urge UI had poorer power of attention and speed of memory than continent patients but similar continuity of attention (P<.001, .001, and .07, respectively). Patients with IA-UI performed poorer in all categories than continent and patients with urge UI (all P<.01). In regression analyses, IA-UI was the strongest predictor of mortality and nursing home residence after 1 year (odds ratio=15.7, 95% confidence interval=3.6-69.7). When deaths were excluded, IA-UI and continuity of attention remained independent risk factors. CONCLUSION: Patients with poststroke UI are less attentive than continent patients. Those with IA-UI perform poorest. Sustained attention seems important for outcome and should be taken more into account in the rehabilitation process. In patients who recognize their incontinence, attention-focused training might be the most effective measure of reestablishing bladder control.  相似文献   

9.
Urinary incontinence (UI) frequently occurs in psychogeriatric nursing home patients. In general the personnel involved in the care for these patients act on incontinence noted. Patients are not monitored or classified according to likelihood or severity of incontinence. This study was conducted to develop and validate a model for the classification of the likelihood of UI in demented nursing home patients. A multi-center cross-sectional study was conducted using data on clinical and functional status of 692 subjects. Subjects were subdivided in a Derivation set of 532 patients and a Validation set of 160 patients. The data were ascertained with questionnaires completed by physicians and nursing staff. All psychogeriatric wards (25) of four Dutch nursing homes were included. Using univariate logistic regression analysis on the derivation set we identified correlates of UI among 22 clinical and functional patient characteristics. Subsequently, we developed a classification model for prevalent UI, including independent patient characteristics by means of multivariable logistic regression. Next, we stratified patients into groups with varying likelihood's of UI based on the model developed. Subsequently, we transformed the model to an easy applicable classification rule for the identification of patient subgroups with high or low likelihood on UI. Finally, the rule was validated on the validation set. The independent multivariate factors associated with urinary incontinence were impaired ADL and mobility, diminished alertness and fecal impaction. After transforming the regression model to an easy classification rule, the scores ranged from 0 to 7. The area under the curve was 0.88 (95% Confidence Interval (CI): 0.85-0.91) in the derivation set. In the validation set a similar area under the curve was obtained (0.90 (95% CI: 0.85-0.95)). Among subjects with none of the associated factors the rule classified 0.5% as incontinent patients. In case all associated factors were present the proportion classified as incontinent increased to 91%. In conclusion, the developed classification rule provides means to stratifying nursing home patients according to their likelihood of being incontinent of urine.  相似文献   

10.
BACKGROUND: Despite the high prevalence of urinary incontinence (UI) among older persons and the existence of effective treatments, UI remains underreported by patients and underdiagnosed by clinicians. We measured the occurrence of UI problems in Medicare managed care beneficiaries, frequency of physician-patient communication regarding UI, and frequency of UI treatment. METHODS: We used cross-sectional data from the 2004 Medicare Health Outcomes Survey, which measured self-reported UI (accidental leakage of urine) and UI problems in the past 6 months, 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey health measures, discussions of UI with a health care provider, and receipt of UI treatment. RESULTS: The overall incidence of UI within the past 6 months was 37.3%, consistent with previous estimates. Problems with UI were strongly associated with poorer self-reported health. Mean 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey physical and mental health scores were lower by more than 5 points (on a 100-point scale, P<.001) for respondents with major UI problems when controlling for age, sex, race, Hispanic ethnicity, and major comorbidities. These differences were among the largest of any condition measured. Only 55.5% of those with self-reported UI problems reported discussing these problems during their recent visit to a physician or other health care provider. The rate of patient-reported UI treatment was 56.5% and was lower (P<.001) for older individuals (eg, 46.3% for those aged 90-94 years) or those with poor self-reported health status (50.5%). CONCLUSIONS: Among older persons, UI is common, underdiagnosed, and associated with substantial functional impairment. There appears to be considerable opportunity to mitigate the effects of UI on health and quality of life among community-dwelling older persons.  相似文献   

11.
OBJECTIVES: To determine whether nursing home residents with urinary incontinence (UI) have worse quality of life (QoL) than continent residents, whether the relationship between UI and QoL differs across strata of cognitive and functional impairment, and whether change in continence status is associated with change in QoL. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study using a Minimum Data Set (MDS) database to determine cross-sectional and longitudinal (6 month) associations between UI and QoL. SETTING: All Medicare- or Medicaid-licensed nursing homes in Kansas, Maine, Mississippi, New York, and South Dakota during 1994 to 1996. PARTICIPANTS: All residents aged 65 and older, excluding persons unable to void or with potentially unstable continence or QoL status (recent nursing home admission, coexistent delirium, large change in functional status, comatose, near death). MEASUREMENTS: UI was defined as consistent leakage at least twice weekly over 3 months and continence as consistent dryness over 3 months. QoL was measured using the validated MDS-derived Social Engagement Scale. RESULTS: Of 133,111 eligible residents, 90,538 had consistent continence status, 58,850 (65%) of whom were incontinent. UI was significantly associated with worse QoL in residents with moderate cognitive and functional impairment. New or worsening UI over 6 months was associated with worse QoL (odds ratio = 1.46, 95% confidence interval = 1.36-1.57) and was second only to cognitive decline and functional decline in predicting worse QoL. CONCLUSION: This is the first study to quantitatively demonstrate that prevalent and new or worsening UI decreases QoL even in frail, functionally and cognitively impaired nursing home residents. These results provide a crucial incentive to improve continence care and quality in nursing homes and a rationale for targeting interventions to those residents most likely to benefit.  相似文献   

12.
Incontinence in the elderly: prevalence and prognosis   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
In a randomly selected sample of 559 subjects 65 years and over living in the community and in institutions the prevalence of urinary incontinence was found to be 11.6%. In those 80 years and over the prevalence rose to 21.7%. Those with dementia were more likely to be incontinent than those with normal mental function. In the majority of those over 80 who were incontinent, the incontinence was associated with either confusion or a combination of factors. The estimated population prevalence of faecal incontinence for those 65 years and over was 3.1%. Urinary incontinence was associated with an increased risk of death. In a review of subjects after three years 73.5% of the incontinent group had died while only 34.9% of those originally continent had died. Because incontinent elderly people are commonly frail, with a number of conditions contributing to the disorder, the extent of investigation of the disorder needs to be carefully assessed for each patient.  相似文献   

13.
OBJECTIVES. This article reports the characteristics associated with fecal incontinence (FI) in a nursing home population that are also associated with urinary incontinence (UI). METHOD. A cross-sectional survey composed of data from the Wisconsin Center for Health Statistics' Annual Nursing Home Survey in 1992 and 1993. Demographic characteristics, functional status, and disease histories were correlated with UI. RESULTS. Data were available for 18,170 and 17,117 residents respectively, 56% of who were to varying degrees incontinent of urine in each year. Significant positive associations with UI included, in order of adjusted odds ratios: FI, truncal restraints, dementia, female gender, impaired vision, stroke, and constipation. Inverse associations were age, body mass index, tube feedings, and pressure ulcers. Diabetes, heart disease, arthritis, fecal impaction, and race were not associated with UI. CONCLUSIONS. UI frequently coexists with FI in nursing home residents. FI and UI differ in their association with age, body mass, and gender.  相似文献   

14.
The medical records of 412 residents of three southeastern Massachusetts nursing homes were reviewed to examine the frequency and medical management of urinary incontinence and the indications for chronic urinary catheterization. The mean age of the patients was 84.1 years. In this study 9.7% of the patients were managed with a urinary catheter, while an indication for catheterization was recorded in the medical records of only 27.5% of these patients. Half of the noncatheterized nursing home patients were transiently or permanently incontinent of urine, but were not catheterized. Incontinent patients without catheters were more likely to require assistance in toileting (75.5 v 26.1%) or to have bacteriuria (60.1 v 26.1%) than continent patients. Despite the frequency of urinary incontinence, this problem was included in the medical problem list of less than 5% of the incontinent nursing home patients. The authors conclude that urinary incontinence is a frequent medical problem in the nursing home population, but it is rarely recorded and evaluated as a medical problem. Furthermore, indications for urinary catheterization frequently are also not recorded. An explanation for this practice was not determined, but possibilities include a lack of physician knowledge of the evaluation and management of incontinence and a nonaggressive approach to such patients, given their other medical problems.  相似文献   

15.
Factors affecting completion of the SF-36 in older people   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
OBJECTIVE: to examine the influence of specific clinical impairments and disabilities on the completion of the SF-36 health status measure among older people. DESIGN: Prospective observational study. SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: An SF-36 was administered to 245 subjects aged 65 years and older. Subjects were chosen by sampling from a variety of inpatient, outpatient and community sources to ensure a range of relevant disabilities. MEASUREMENTS: response rates, overall rates of completion, completion of individual questions and time taken to complete. RESULTS: severe functional impairment (Barthel index < or = 12) was found in 22.4% (51/228), cognitive impairment in 54.1% (132/244), depressed mood in 77.0% (151/196) and visuospatial dysfunction in 71.3% (134/188). The median number of impairments was three (interquartile range 1-4). Specific physical impairments were visual in 13.2% (31/235), hearing in 30.2% (74/245), impaired manual dexterity in 18.0% (44/245) and dysphasia in 23% (55/239). In multivariate analyses, global functional impairment (P = 0.006), cognitive impairment (P = 0.0001) and impaired manual dexterity (P = 0.005) were significantly associated with more dimensions uncompleted, whilst cognitive impairment (P = 0.001), age (P = 0.006) and visuospatial dysfunction (P = 0.0003) were significantly associated with longer completion times. CONCLUSION: the most striking finding of the study was that global rather than specific physical and mental dysfunction was associated with the inability to complete the SF-36 questionnaire. The difficulty appears to lie in the performance of a complex task, rather than with specific aspects of the task which could be overcome by adaptation or aids. Our experience is that this relatively complex questionnaire does not adequately measure functional health status in disabled older people because of non-completion and may therefore overestimate the health of populations.  相似文献   

16.
17.
The relationship between behavioral symptoms and cognitive impairment in Alzheimer's Disease (AD) is only poorly understood. The aim of the present study was to examine cognitive correlates of urinary incontinence in AD. Although incontinence is generally accepted as an accompaniment of AD, it was our clinical impression that it correlated poorly with global measures of cognitive impairment. A retrospective pilot study of 17 incontinent demented patients and 17 continent patients, matched for age, sex, and total score on the Folstein Mini-Mental Status Exam (MMSE), revealed a striking association between an inability to do a copy task and urinary incontinence. A prospective study confirmed this finding in a sample of 45 patients meeting DSMIII-R diagnostic criteria for dementia, probable Alzheimer's disease. The 17 incontinent patients did not differ from the 28 continent patients in age, sex distribution, or total score on the MMSE. However, the incontinent subjects scored significantly lower on a cube copying task. Qualitative analysis revealed that the drawings by incontinent patients showed features comparable with those observed in the drawings by patients with right-sided parietal lesions, in particular, poor representation of perspective and spatial orientation. Further investigation of the relationship between copying performance and incontinence may have implications for understanding the cortical mechanisms of urinary continence. The present results also underscore the limitations of the MMSE as a measure of dementia severity and suggest there are areas of cognitive ability which are inadequately assessed by MMSE but which may be of major important in understanding the loss of functional skills in the dementing patient.  相似文献   

18.
This article presents a profile of incontinent elderly in long-term care institutions. One hundred thirty-three frail elderly women were recruited from seven nursing homes in central Pennsylvania for a three-year clinical trial to test the effectiveness of a behavioral therapy on urinary incontinence. All of the patients had more than one medical diagnosis. Eighty percent had cardiorespiratory conditions; the most prevalent diagnoses were cardiovascular diseases. Eighty percent had one or more neurological diseases, including "organic brain syndrome" (47%) and senile dementia (30%); 44% had arthritis/rheumatism. Half of the patients showed severe cognitive impairment; only 12% showed no cognitive impairment. Sixty-three percent were totally dependent; 68% used wheelchairs, 61% were chairbound; 50% had impairments in vision, one-third in hearing, and 14% in speech. Normal bladder capacity, absence of detrusor instability, and satisfactory bladder emptying, as evidenced by low residual urines, was found in 41% of the patients, suggesting that incontinence in this elderly group may not be a primary bladder problem, but rather that mental and physical disabilities may be a more important underlying cause of incontinence in these patients. An important finding in this study is that 34% of the patients had detrusor instability. It is theoretically possible that pharmacologic therapy with anticholinergic agents or imipramine could improve incontinence in this group. Five percent were found to have large residual urine volumes in association with high-capacity bladders suggesting overflow incontinence as the cause of their daily leakage. Pelvic relaxation and stress leakage was far less common in this elderly group of nursing home patients than in young and middle-aged women.  相似文献   

19.
OBJECTIVES: To determine whether continence status is associated with sexual activity in older women. DESIGN: Cross-sectional postal survey. SETTING: Random selection from a list of respondents to a Canada Post survey. PARTICIPANTS: Community-dwelling women aged 55 to 95. MEASUREMENTS: The International Consultation on Incontinence Questionnaire Short Form measured the presence, severity, and type of incontinence. Sexual activity and marital status were assessed using single close-ended questions. The Medical Outcomes Study 12-item Short-Form Health Survey was used to query physical and mental health status. RESULTS: Data from 2,361 women (mean age 71) were available for analysis. Thirty-nine percent reported urinary incontinence (UI), and 27% were sexually active. UI was associated with sexual activity in crude logistic analyses (odds ratio (OR)=0.82, 95% confidence interval (CI)=0.68-0.98) but not in multivariate models adjusted for physical and mental health. Marital status and age were the strongest predictors of sexual activity (OR 8.94, 95% CI=6.89-11.60 for married women; OR=3.09, 95% CI=2.57-3.73 for age 相似文献   

20.
OBJECTIVES: To examine the relationship of urinary incontinence (UI) and depressive symptoms (DS) in older adults. DESIGN: A randomized, controlled trial to determine the effects of clinical practice guideline implementation on provider attitudes and behavior, and patients' UI, health status, quality of life, and satisfaction with care. Baseline and endpoint data were collected from patients via computer-assisted telephone interviewing. SETTING: Forty-one nonacademic primary care practices (PCP) in North Carolina. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 668 community-dwelling adults (age > 60) who had visited the one of the selected PCPs. INTERVENTION: PCPs in the intervention group were given instruction in the detection and management of UI, educational materials for providers and patients, office system supports, and academic detailing. MEASUREMENTS: The dependent measure was assessed using an eight-item screener for DS. UI (status, frequency, amount), health (physical, mental), and demographic (age, gender, marital status) and self-report information about bladder control served as predictors. RESULTS: Wilcoxon rank sum tests showed that UI status was associated with moderate to severe DS (43% vs 30%, P = .05). Multivariate analyses showed that UI status, physical and mental health, and gender were significant predictors of DS. Among UI adults (n = 230), physical and mental health, life satisfaction, and the perception that UI interfered with daily life were significant predictors of DS. CONCLUSIONS: This study provides clear evidence that UI is related to DS in older adults.  相似文献   

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