Loading…

Protocol - Urinary Incontinence

Add to My Toolkit
Description

An interview-administered four-item questionnaire measuring urine leakage, use of protection for urine leakage, and impact of leakage of urine on daily activities.

Specific Instructions

Although the original Health, Aging, and Body Composition Study was conducted in the geriatric population, the PhenX Geriatrics Working Group acknowledges this protocol may be used with other adult populations.

Availability

Available

Protocol

1. In the past 12 months, how often have you leaked urine? 

0[ ]less than once per month

1[ ]one or more times per month

2[ ]one or more times per week

3[ ]Every day

8[ ]Dont know

2. In the past 12 months, when does your leakage usually occur? 

(Interviewer note: OPTIONAL)

1[ ]With an activity like coughing, lifting, standing up or exercise

2[ ]When you have the urge to urinate and cant get to a toilet fast enough

3[ ]You leak urine unrelated to coughing, sneezing, lifting or urge

8[ ]Dont know

7[ ]Refused

3. Do you wear any protection for when you leak urine? 

1[ ]Yes (if yes, go to 3b)

2[ ]No

8[ ]Dont know

7[ ]Refused

3b. During a typical day, how many times, on average, do you change your protection because it is wet?

0[ ]None

1[ ]Once

2[ ]2 to 3 times

3[ ]4 or more times

8[ ]Dont know

4. How much does the leakage of urine interfere with your daily activities (such as work, exercise, shopping, or recreational activities)? Would you say?.

1[ ]Not at all

2[ ]Mildly

3[ ]Moderately

4[ ]Severely

8[ ]Dont know

Personnel and Training Required

The interviewer must be trained to conduct personal interviews with individuals from the general population. The interviewer must be trained and found to be competent (i.e., tested by an expert) at the completion of personal interviews. The interviewer should be trained to prompt respondents further if a "dont know" response is provided."

Equipment Needs
The PhenX Working Group acknowledges that these questions can be administered in a computerized or noncomputerized format (i.e., paper-and-pencil instrument). Computer software is necessary to develop computer-assisted instruments. The interviewer will require a laptop computer/handheld computer to administer a computer-assisted questionnaire
Requirements
Requirement CategoryRequired
Major equipment No
Specialized training No
Specialized requirements for biospecimen collection No
Average time of greater than 15 minutes in an unaffected individual No
Mode of Administration

Interviewer-administered questionnaire

Lifestage

Adult, Senior

Participants

The Health, Aging and Body Composition Study questions were used on a large population of biracial older adult women.

Selection Rationale

The Health, Aging and Body Composition Study questions were used on a large population of biracial older adult women.

Language

English

Standards
StandardNameIDSource
Human Phenotype Ontology Urinary Incontinence HP:0000020 HPO
caDSR Form PhenX PX251601 - Urinary Incontinence 6910605 caDSR Form
caDSR Form PhenX PX251601 - Urinary Incontinence 6930256 caDSR Form
Derived Variables

None

Process and Review

Not applicable.

>

Protocol Name from Source

Health, Aging, and Body Composition Study (Health ABC), Urinary History

Source

The Health, Aging and Body Composition Study questions were used on a large population of biracial older adult women.

General References

Jackson, R. A., Vittinghoff, E., Kanaya, A. M., Miles, T. P., Resnick, H. E., Kritchevsky, S. B., ... Brown, J. S. (2004). Urinary incontinence in elderly women: Findings from the Health, Aging, and Body Composition Study. Obstetrics & Gynecology, 104,301-307.

Peron, E. P., Zheng, Y., Perera, S., Newman, A. B., Resnick, N. M., Shorr, R. I., ... Ruby, C. M. (2012).  Antihypertensive drug class use and differential risk of urinary incontinence in community-dwelling older women. Journals of Gerontology. Series A, Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences  67,1373-1378.

Protocol ID

251601

Variables
Export Variables
Variable Name Variable IDVariable DescriptiondbGaP Mapping
PX251601_Urinary_Incontinence_Change_Protection
PX251601030200 During a typical day, how many times, on more
average, do you change your protection because it is wet? show less
N/A
PX251601_Urinary_Incontinence_Leakage_Interfere_Daily_Activities
PX251601040000 How much does the leakage of urine interfere more
with your daily activities (such as work, exercise, shopping, or recreational activities)? Would you say show less
N/A
PX251601_Urinary_Incontinence_Leakage_Usually_Occur
PX251601020000 In the past 12 months, when does your more
leakage usually occur? show less
N/A
PX251601_Urinary_Incontinence_Leaked_Urine
PX251601010000 In the past 12 months, how often have you more
leaked urine? show less
N/A
PX251601_Urinary_Incontinence_Wear_Protection
PX251601030100 Do you wear any protection for when you leak more
urine? show less
N/A
Geriatrics
Measure Name

Urinary Incontinence

Release Date

July 2, 2018

Definition

A questionnaire assessing urinary leakage in the past 12 months.

Purpose

It is important to address urinary incontinence, as it is a symptom that can be caused by problems in the urinary tract or by underlying medical or physical problems. It can potentially cause additional complications, including skin problems and urinary tract infections. Risk factors include gender, age, being overweight, smoking, a family history of urinary incontinence, diabetes, and additional neurological diseases. Urinary incontinence can be stigmatizing and lead to limitations in daily activities.

Keywords

leak, leakage, urge, bladder, urinary tract infection, "Health, Aging and Body Composition Study", Health ABC, geriatrics, National Institute on Aging, NIA, gerontology, aging

Measure Protocols
Protocol ID Protocol Name
251601 Urinary Incontinence
Publications

There are no publications listed for this protocol.