Understanding user experiences of providing and utilizing washable absorbent continence products in India, Papua New Guinea and Romania
Understanding user experiences of providing and utilizing washable absorbent continence products in India, Papua New Guinea and Romania
Incontinence is a global health and social care challenge. Effectively containing bladder or bowel leakage is fundamental for people living with incontinence. Disposable absorbent products are widely used, but do not work well for everyone and are neither financially nor environmentally sustainable. Specifically designed washable absorbent products are not widely used. We aimed to understand people's experiences of using or providing washable products in different contexts. We undertook 57 interviews with product-users and/or carers and three focus groups with service providers in India, Papua New Guinea and Romania. Five themes were identified: 1) Usability variation, 2) Impact on lives, 3) Do no harm, 4) Future Use and 5) Scalability. We found that washable products have the potential to improve the lives of many people with long-term continence problems, but the designs tested do not work for everyone. Individual assessment and the opportunity to try out products are important. There is considerable scope for better designs and raising awareness of usage. Opinions on the products are partly shaped by the products used previously and individual financial considerations play a role. Overall, there is a clear demand for washable absorbent continence products, and innovation through co-design is urgently needed.
assistive technology, continence products, incontinence, sustainability; Lmics
Murphy, Cathy
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Pannell, Lucie
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Ghosh, Ritu
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Kamalakannan, Sureshkumar
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Palanivelu, Vennila
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Kuambu, Almah
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Zuvani, Ben
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Stefan, George
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Mesesan, Iuliana
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Murphy, Cathy
b7f2dd56-3a8a-412a-9f6a-bf468ce7f749
Pannell, Lucie
435aa120-c946-48e2-beef-01cde2f89ccf
Ghosh, Ritu
e17f1fa3-0a1a-48fa-bd8d-26105a9d39d0
Kamalakannan, Sureshkumar
064bc79d-89d6-4b32-b3f6-b249d118f0ef
Palanivelu, Vennila
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Kuambu, Almah
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Zuvani, Ben
97704113-f029-4c88-8946-9e6c679772e2
Stefan, George
f4f7ff06-aa71-4d28-9cdf-def7b8e62876
Mesesan, Iuliana
28d1e0e0-8aa8-46b3-9edf-7ed2731a21c5
Murphy, Cathy, Pannell, Lucie, Ghosh, Ritu, Kamalakannan, Sureshkumar, Palanivelu, Vennila, Kuambu, Almah, Zuvani, Ben, Stefan, George and Mesesan, Iuliana
(2025)
Understanding user experiences of providing and utilizing washable absorbent continence products in India, Papua New Guinea and Romania.
Assistive Technology.
(doi:10.1080/10400435.2025.2500070).
Abstract
Incontinence is a global health and social care challenge. Effectively containing bladder or bowel leakage is fundamental for people living with incontinence. Disposable absorbent products are widely used, but do not work well for everyone and are neither financially nor environmentally sustainable. Specifically designed washable absorbent products are not widely used. We aimed to understand people's experiences of using or providing washable products in different contexts. We undertook 57 interviews with product-users and/or carers and three focus groups with service providers in India, Papua New Guinea and Romania. Five themes were identified: 1) Usability variation, 2) Impact on lives, 3) Do no harm, 4) Future Use and 5) Scalability. We found that washable products have the potential to improve the lives of many people with long-term continence problems, but the designs tested do not work for everyone. Individual assessment and the opportunity to try out products are important. There is considerable scope for better designs and raising awareness of usage. Opinions on the products are partly shaped by the products used previously and individual financial considerations play a role. Overall, there is a clear demand for washable absorbent continence products, and innovation through co-design is urgently needed.
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Understanding user experiences of providing and utilizing washable absorbent continence products in India Papua New Guinea and Romania
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Accepted/In Press date: 31 March 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 3 June 2025
Keywords:
assistive technology, continence products, incontinence, sustainability; Lmics
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 503032
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/503032
ISSN: 1040-0435
PURE UUID: 78bd1733-723d-46a3-926e-cbfc889dfa9c
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Date deposited: 16 Jul 2025 16:51
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:11
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Contributors
Author:
Lucie Pannell
Author:
Ritu Ghosh
Author:
Sureshkumar Kamalakannan
Author:
Vennila Palanivelu
Author:
Almah Kuambu
Author:
Ben Zuvani
Author:
George Stefan
Author:
Iuliana Mesesan
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