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Journal Article

Citation

Tannenbaum C, Fritel X, Halme A, van den Heuvel E, Jutai J, Wagg A. Age Ageing 2019; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Affiliation

Department of Geriatrics, Faculty of Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Oxford University Press)

DOI

10.1093/ageing/afz038

PMID

31220200

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The long-term effectiveness of group continence promotion delivered via community organisations on female urinary incontinence, falls and healthy life expectancy remains unknown.

METHODS: A pragmatic cluster randomised trial was conducted among 909 women aged 65-98 years with urinary incontinence, recruited from 377 community organisations in the UK, Canada and France. A total of 184 organisations were randomised to an in-person 60-min incontinence self-management workshop (461 participants), and 193 to a control healthy ageing workshop (448 participants). The primary outcome was self-reported incontinence improvement at 1-year. Falls and gains in health utility were secondary outcomes.

RESULTS: A total 751 women, mean age 78.0, age range 65-98 completed the trial (83%). At 1-year, 15% of the intervention group versus 6.9% of controls reported significant improvements in urinary symptoms, (difference 8.1%, 95% confidence intervals (CI) 4.0-12.1%, intracluster correlation 0.04, number-needed-to-treat 13) and 35% versus 19% reported any improvement (risk difference 16.0%, 95% CI 10.4-21.5, number-needed-to-treat 6). The proportion of fallers decreased from 42% to 36% in the intervention group (-8.0%, 95% CI -14.8 - -1.0) and from 44% to 34% in the control group (-10.3%, 95% CI -17.4 - -3.6), no difference between groups. Both intervention and control groups experienced a gain in health utility (0.022 points (95% CI 0.005-0.04) versus 0.035 (95% CI 0.017-0.052), respectively), with no significant difference between groups.

CONCLUSION: Community-based group continence promotion achieves long-term benefits on older women's urinary symptoms, without improvement in falls or healthy life expectancy compared with participation in a healthy ageing workshop.

© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society.


Language: en

Keywords

cluster randomised trial; falls; health utility; older people; older women; urinary incontinence

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