The Spectrum of Bladder Health: The Relationship Between Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms and Interference with Activities

Little research to date has focused on lower urinary tract symptom (LUTS) prevention and bladder health promotion in women. To address this gap, the Prevention of LUTS Research Consortium developed the following working bladder health definition: "A complete state of physical, mental, and socia...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of women's health (Larchmont, N.Y. 2002) N.Y. 2002), 2019-06, Vol.28 (6), p.827-841
Hauptverfasser: Sutcliffe, Siobhan, Bavendam, Tamara, Cain, Charles, Epperson, C Neill, Fitzgerald, Colleen M, Gahagan, Sheila, Markland, Alayne D, Shoham, David A, Smith, Ariana L, Townsend, Mary K, Rudser, Kyle
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container_issue 6
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container_title Journal of women's health (Larchmont, N.Y. 2002)
container_volume 28
creator Sutcliffe, Siobhan
Bavendam, Tamara
Cain, Charles
Epperson, C Neill
Fitzgerald, Colleen M
Gahagan, Sheila
Markland, Alayne D
Shoham, David A
Smith, Ariana L
Townsend, Mary K
Rudser, Kyle
description Little research to date has focused on lower urinary tract symptom (LUTS) prevention and bladder health promotion in women. To address this gap, the Prevention of LUTS Research Consortium developed the following working bladder health definition: "A complete state of physical, mental, and social well-being related to bladder function [that] permits daily activities [and] allows optimal well-being." To begin to inform and quantify this definition, we used data from the Boston Area Community Health Survey, drawing upon its rare collection of information on LUTS and LUTS-specific interference with activities. At baseline, participants reported their frequency of 15 LUTS and interference with 7 activities. Prevalence ratios (PRs) were calculated by generalized linear models with robust variance estimation, adjusting for LUTS risk factors and individual LUTS. Of the 3169 eligible participants, 17.5% reported no LUTS or interference, whereas the remaining 82.5% reported some frequency of LUTS/interference: 15.1% rarely; 21.7% a few times; 22.6% fairly often/usually; and 22.9% almost always. LUTS independently associated with interference were urgency incontinence, any incontinence, urgency, nocturia, perceived frequency, and urinating again after
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To address this gap, the Prevention of LUTS Research Consortium developed the following working bladder health definition: "A complete state of physical, mental, and social well-being related to bladder function [that] permits daily activities [and] allows optimal well-being." To begin to inform and quantify this definition, we used data from the Boston Area Community Health Survey, drawing upon its rare collection of information on LUTS and LUTS-specific interference with activities. At baseline, participants reported their frequency of 15 LUTS and interference with 7 activities. Prevalence ratios (PRs) were calculated by generalized linear models with robust variance estimation, adjusting for LUTS risk factors and individual LUTS. Of the 3169 eligible participants, 17.5% reported no LUTS or interference, whereas the remaining 82.5% reported some frequency of LUTS/interference: 15.1% rarely; 21.7% a few times; 22.6% fairly often/usually; and 22.9% almost always. LUTS independently associated with interference were urgency incontinence, any incontinence, urgency, nocturia, perceived frequency, and urinating again after &lt;2 hours (PRs = 1.2-1.5, all  &lt; 0.05). Our findings suggest that bladder health exists on a continuum, with approximately one in five women considered to have optimal bladder health (no LUTS/interference), the majority to have intermediate health (LUTS/interference rarely to usually), and a further one in five to have worse or poor health (LUTS/interference almost always). 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subjects Adult
Aged
Boston - epidemiology
Dysuria - epidemiology
Female
Health Surveys
Humans
Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms - epidemiology
Middle Aged
Nocturia - epidemiology
Original
Prevalence
Quality of Life
Risk Factors
Surveys and Questionnaires
Urinary Bladder - physiology
Urinary Bladder, Overactive - epidemiology
Urinary Incontinence - epidemiology
title The Spectrum of Bladder Health: The Relationship Between Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms and Interference with Activities
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