Experience with an Incontinence Clinic*
- 1 December 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of the American Geriatrics Society
- Vol. 28 (12) , 535-538
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1532-5415.1980.tb00002.x
Abstract
In an “incontinence clinic,” a study of 309 elderly patients showed the most common causes of incontinence to be: unstable bladder (57 percent), outflow obstruction (13 percent), and atonic bladder (7 percent). Pure stress incontinence was rare (2 percent). One third of the patients improved, one third had to be catheterized, and one third did not improve. An individually designed program of bladder retraining for the patient, coupled with support and instruction for the relatives and for the professional care providers, offered the best chance of success.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Whole gut irrigation: a new treatment for constipation.BMJ, 1978
- URINARY INFECTION AND SYMPTOMS OF DYSURIA IN WOMEN AGED 45–64 YEARS: THEIR RELEVANCE TO SIMILAR FINDINGS IN THE ELDERLYAge and Ageing, 1972
- The Prevalence and Symptomatology of Urinary Infection in an Aged PopulationGerontologia Clinica, 1968
- A Survey of Incontinence in Elderly Hospital PatientsGerontologia Clinica, 1964