Quality of life in women with urinary incontinence seeking care using e-health
2021 (English)In: BMC Women's Health, E-ISSN 1472-6874, Vol. 21, no 1, article id 337Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]
Background: Quality of life (QoL) in women with urinary incontinence (UI) is mainly affected by UI severity, but it is also affected by the UI subtype, comorbidities, age, and socioeconomic status. e-Health is a new method for providing UI treatment. This study aimed to identify factors with the highest impact on QoL in women that turned to e-health for UI self-management.
Methods: We analysed data from three randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that evaluated e-health treatments for UI. We included baseline data for 373 women with stress urinary incontinence (SUI) and 123 women with urgency/mixed UI (UUI/MUI). All participants were recruited online, with no face-to-face contact. Participants completed two questionnaires: the International Consultation on Incontinence Questionnaire-Urinary Incontinence Short Form (ICIQ-UI SF, range: 0–21 points), for assessing UI severity, and the ICIQ Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms Quality of Life (ICIQ-LUTSqol, range: 19–76 points), for assessing condition-specific quality of life (QoL). To identify factors that impacted QoL, we constructed a linear regression model.
Results: The mean ICIQ-LUTSqol score was 34.9 (SD 7.6). UI severity significantly affected QoL; the adjusted mean ICIQ-LUTSqol score increased by 1.5 points for each 1.0-point increase in the overall ICIQ-UI SF score (p < 0.001). The UI type also significantly affected QoL; the adjusted mean ICIQ-LUTSqol score was 2.5 points higher in women with UUI/MUI compared to those with SUI (p < 0.001).
Conclusions: We found that women that turned to e-health for UI self-management advice had a reduced QoL, as shown previously among women seeking UI care through conventional avenues, and that the severity of leakage had a greater impact on QoL than the type of UI. Condition-specific factors impacted the QoL slightly less among women that turned to e-health, compared to women that sought help in ordinary care. Thus, e-health might have reached a new group of women in need of UI treatment.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
BioMed Central, 2021. Vol. 21, no 1, article id 337
Keywords [en]
E-health, ICIQ-LUTSqol, ICIQ-UI SF, Quality of life, Urinary incontinence, Women
National Category
Urology and Nephrology Public Health, Global Health, Social Medicine and Epidemiology
Research subject
Public health
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-187932DOI: 10.1186/s12905-021-01477-0ISI: 000697361900002PubMedID: 34544393Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85115270295OAI: oai:DiVA.org:umu-187932DiVA, id: diva2:1597636
2021-09-272021-09-272023-08-28Bibliographically approved