Absorbent products for incontinence: 'treatment effects' and impact on quality of life
Absorbent products for incontinence: 'treatment effects' and impact on quality of life
Aim: This study aimed to determine how the use and characteristics of absorbent products for incontinence impact on women's quality of life, and to examine the concept of ‘treatment effects’ in the context of pad use.
Method: Key pad performance characteristics were identified from the literature and focus group work. Semi-structured interviews with 99 women with light incontinence were used to investigate the impact of pad use on women's quality of life, including both positive and negative ‘treatment effects’, and to rank pad characteristics by their importance.
Results: Achieving effective and discrete containment of urine was the dominant factor impacting on women's lives. Sub-themes embraced physical effects, psychological impact and social functioning. The five pad characteristics ranked most important for day time use were: ‘to hold urine, to contain smell, to stay in place, discreteness, and comfort when wet. For night use discreteness was replaced by to keep skin dry’. High levels of reported anxiety were associated with perceived risk of poor pad performance, lack of discreteness and need for complex regimes for pad management.
Conclusion: Insufficient attention has been paid to the balance between the beneficial and negative treatment effects of absorbent pads to date. Existing continence-related quality of life measures are not designed for conditions where change in symptoms is not an outcome measure. The study findings provide the basis for developing a more sensitive, patient-oriented, quality of life measure for pad-users which can aid product selection, new product development and inform future evaluative comparisons between products/products and treatments.
Relevance to clinical practice. This paper illustrates the complex influence on quality of life caused by using absorbent pads to contain incontinence. It raises awareness of the importance of careful selection of the most appropriate pad for each individual to minimize unfavourable side effects, and the need for a new quality of life measure designed for pad-users.
incontinence, absorbent products, quality of life
1936-1945
Getliffe, K.
3ce38a84-b0ba-46b8-99e1-126de7cc35e7
Fader, M.
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Cottenden, A.
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Jamieson, K.
bca786c9-9afe-4695-b946-583dd5b3e288
Green, N.
ee4698fd-11fd-4050-b9c1-174b4f6380a7
October 2007
Getliffe, K.
3ce38a84-b0ba-46b8-99e1-126de7cc35e7
Fader, M.
c318f942-2ddb-462a-9183-8b678faf7277
Cottenden, A.
28e7146a-44b1-4e89-8b37-91f994c04eb3
Jamieson, K.
bca786c9-9afe-4695-b946-583dd5b3e288
Green, N.
ee4698fd-11fd-4050-b9c1-174b4f6380a7
Getliffe, K., Fader, M., Cottenden, A., Jamieson, K. and Green, N.
(2007)
Absorbent products for incontinence: 'treatment effects' and impact on quality of life.
Journal of Clinical Nursing, 16 (10), .
(doi:10.1111/j.1365-2702.2007.01812.x).
Abstract
Aim: This study aimed to determine how the use and characteristics of absorbent products for incontinence impact on women's quality of life, and to examine the concept of ‘treatment effects’ in the context of pad use.
Method: Key pad performance characteristics were identified from the literature and focus group work. Semi-structured interviews with 99 women with light incontinence were used to investigate the impact of pad use on women's quality of life, including both positive and negative ‘treatment effects’, and to rank pad characteristics by their importance.
Results: Achieving effective and discrete containment of urine was the dominant factor impacting on women's lives. Sub-themes embraced physical effects, psychological impact and social functioning. The five pad characteristics ranked most important for day time use were: ‘to hold urine, to contain smell, to stay in place, discreteness, and comfort when wet. For night use discreteness was replaced by to keep skin dry’. High levels of reported anxiety were associated with perceived risk of poor pad performance, lack of discreteness and need for complex regimes for pad management.
Conclusion: Insufficient attention has been paid to the balance between the beneficial and negative treatment effects of absorbent pads to date. Existing continence-related quality of life measures are not designed for conditions where change in symptoms is not an outcome measure. The study findings provide the basis for developing a more sensitive, patient-oriented, quality of life measure for pad-users which can aid product selection, new product development and inform future evaluative comparisons between products/products and treatments.
Relevance to clinical practice. This paper illustrates the complex influence on quality of life caused by using absorbent pads to contain incontinence. It raises awareness of the importance of careful selection of the most appropriate pad for each individual to minimize unfavourable side effects, and the need for a new quality of life measure designed for pad-users.
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Published date: October 2007
Keywords:
incontinence, absorbent products, quality of life
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Local EPrints ID: 49080
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/49080
ISSN: 0962-1067
PURE UUID: a560ea62-2fcf-4eed-9da7-0d9a2816c37e
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Date deposited: 23 Oct 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 09:52
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Author:
K. Getliffe
Author:
A. Cottenden
Author:
K. Jamieson
Author:
N. Green
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