Urinary Tract Infections Amongst Adults With Intellectual Disabilities With Urinary Incontinence

Between 26% and 52% of adults with intellectual disability experience urinary incontinence (UI). Little is known about the implications of urinary tract infections (UTIs) for this group. The aim was to screen for UTIs in a sample of adults with intellectual disability and UI. Twenty adults with inte...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of applied research in intellectual disabilities 2025-01, Vol.38 (1), p.e13317
Hauptverfasser: Finlayson, Janet, Gore, Nick, Ord, Paul, Roche, Fiona, Butcher, John, Kean, Ryan, Skelton, Dawn A
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container_start_page e13317
container_title Journal of applied research in intellectual disabilities
container_volume 38
creator Finlayson, Janet
Gore, Nick
Ord, Paul
Roche, Fiona
Butcher, John
Kean, Ryan
Skelton, Dawn A
description Between 26% and 52% of adults with intellectual disability experience urinary incontinence (UI). Little is known about the implications of urinary tract infections (UTIs) for this group. The aim was to screen for UTIs in a sample of adults with intellectual disability and UI. Twenty adults with intellectual disability and UI recruited via community intellectual disability health care teams and provided a urine sample. Each sample was tested for the presence of UTI bacteria. Half of the sample were found to have a possible or probable UTI. Nine adults had also been treated for a UTI within the previous 12 months; six adults had more than once. UTIs appear to be very common amongst adults with intellectual disability and UI, and careful attention to UTI symptoms, screening and treatment options for this group are recommended. Larger studies on UTI prevalence and associated factors are also warranted. ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT05626062.
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subjects Adult
Aged
Comorbidity
Female
Humans
Intellectual Disability - epidemiology
Male
Middle Aged
Prevalence
Urinary Incontinence - epidemiology
Urinary Tract Infections - epidemiology
Young Adult
title Urinary Tract Infections Amongst Adults With Intellectual Disabilities With Urinary Incontinence
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