Comprehensive Access and Delivery Research and Evaluation (CADRE) Center, Iowa City Veterans Affairs Health Care System, Iowa City, IA, USA.
This study aims to measure self-report urinary incontinence questions' reproducibility and agreement with bladder diary.
Data were analyzed from the Reproductive Risk of Incontinence Study at Kaiser. Participating women reporting at least weekly incontinence completed self-report incontinence questions and a 7-day bladder diary. Self-report question reproducibility was assessed and agreement between self-reported and diary-recorded voiding and incontinence frequency was measured. Test characteristics and area under the curve were calculated for self-reported incontinence types using diary as the gold standard.
Five hundred ninety-one women were included and 425 completed a diary. The self-report questions had moderate reproducibility and self-reported and diary-recorded incontinence and voiding frequencies had moderate to good agreement. Self-reported incontinence types identified stress and urgency incontinence more accurately than mixed incontinence.
Self-report incontinence questions have moderate reproducibility and agreement with diary, and considering their minimal burden, are acceptable research tools in epidemiologic studies.
Written by:
Bradley CS, Brown JS, Van Den Eeden SK, Schembri M, Ragins A, Thom DH. Are you the author?
Reference: Int Urogynecol J Pelvic Floor Dysfunct. 2011 Jul 28. Epub ahead of print.
doi: 10.1007/s00192-011-1503-3
PubMed Abstract
PMID: 21796472
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