Effect of a Bladder Control Self-Management Program Delivered Through a Health Kiosk.

IF 1.7 3区 医学 Q2 NURSING Journal of Wound Ostomy and Continence Nursing Pub Date : 2024-05-01 Epub Date: 2024-05-27 DOI:10.1097/WON.0000000000001073
Yuchen Zhang, Sandra J Engberg, Karen L Courtney, Jacob K Kariuki, Judith Tabolt Matthews
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Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to examine the feasibility of delivering a bladder control self-management program through a multiuser health kiosk and to evaluate the program's effect on urinary incontinence (UI) and incontinence-specific quality of life (QoL).

Design: Secondary analysis of data collected during participants' interactions with the Bladder Control Module (BCM) from the parent study.

Subjects and setting: One hundred eleven participants from the parent study were eligible to be included in this secondary analysis. Their mean age was 72.8 years, and most were female (n = 95, 85.6%); 81 (75.7%) identified themselves as Caucasian. Each participant could access the BCM at a health kiosk situated at one of several sites: senior centers, subsidized senior housing, retirement communities, and a public library.

Methods: The BCM comprised 6 sessions self-administered at least 1 week apart. The content focused on lifestyle modification, pelvic floor muscle training, and bladder (habit) retraining, with encouragement of behavioral self-monitoring between sessions. The feasibility of delivering the intervention was measured by the proportion of participants completing each session. The effect of the BCM on incontinence episodes and incontinence-specific QoL was measured, respectively, by a 7-day bladder diary and the Incontinence Impact Questionnaire Short Form.

Results: Sixty-one of the 111 eligible participants accessed the BCM. Participants recording incontinence episodes in their baseline bladder diary and completing at least 3 BCM sessions experienced significant decreases in median total UI (P = .01), urge UI (P < .001), and stress UI (P = .02) episodes per day. Incontinence-related QoL significantly improved (P = .03).

Conclusions: Our findings support the potential effectiveness of providing community-based, kiosk-enabled access to a conservative behavioral intervention designed to improve incontinence-related outcomes among older adults with UI. Additional research with a larger sample is warranted.

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通过健康信息亭提供膀胱控制自我管理计划的效果。
目的:本研究旨在探讨通过多用户健康信息亭提供膀胱控制自我管理计划的可行性,并评估该计划对尿失禁(UI)和尿失禁特定生活质量(QoL)的影响:设计:对母研究中参与者与膀胱控制模块(BCM)互动过程中收集的数据进行二次分析:来自母研究的 111 名参与者有资格参与此次二次分析。他们的平均年龄为 72.8 岁,大多数为女性(95 人,占 85.6%);81 人(占 75.7%)自称为白种人。每位参与者都可以在老年中心、老年补贴住房、退休社区和公共图书馆等多个地点之一的健康信息亭访问 BCM:BCM 包括 6 次自我管理课程,每次间隔至少 1 周。内容侧重于生活方式调整、骨盆底肌肉训练和膀胱(习惯)再训练,并鼓励在疗程之间进行行为自我监控。干预措施实施的可行性通过参与者完成每个疗程的比例来衡量。BCM对尿失禁发作和尿失禁特定QoL的影响分别通过7天膀胱日记和尿失禁影响问卷简表进行测量:在 111 名符合条件的参与者中,有 61 人使用了 BCM。在基线膀胱日记中记录尿失禁发作并完成至少 3 次 BCM 治疗的参与者,其尿失禁总次数中位数(P = .01)、急迫性尿失禁次数(P = .01)、急迫性尿失禁次数中位数(P = .01)和急迫性尿失禁次数中位数(P = .01)均显著下降:我们的研究结果表明,以社区为基础、通过自助服务终端进行保守的行为干预,旨在改善患有尿失禁的老年人尿失禁相关结果,具有潜在的有效性。有必要对更多样本进行进一步研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
34.60%
发文量
186
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: ​​The Journal of Wound, Ostomy and Continence Nursing (JWOCN), the official journal of the Wound, Ostomy and Continence Nurses Society™ (WOCN®), is the premier publication for wound, ostomy and continence practice and research. The Journal’s mission is to publish current best evidence and original research to guide the delivery of expert health care. The WOCN Society is a professional nursing society which supports its members by promoting educational, clinical and research opportunities to advance the practice and guide the delivery of expert health care to individuals with wounds, ostomies and continence care needs.
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