The effect of urinary incontinence on quality of life in older nursing home residents.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2006 Sep; 54(9):1325-33.JA

Abstract

OBJECTIVES

To determine whether nursing home residents with urinary incontinence (UI) have worse quality of life (QoL) than continent residents, whether the relationship between UI and QoL differs across strata of cognitive and functional impairment, and whether change in continence status is associated with change in QoL.

DESIGN

Retrospective cohort study using a Minimum Data Set (MDS) database to determine cross-sectional and longitudinal (6 month) associations between UI and QoL.

SETTING

All Medicare- or Medicaid-licensed nursing homes in Kansas, Maine, Mississippi, New York, and South Dakota during 1994 to 1996.

PARTICIPANTS

All residents aged 65 and older, excluding persons unable to void or with potentially unstable continence or QoL status (recent nursing home admission, coexistent delirium, large change in functional status, comatose, near death).

MEASUREMENTS

UI was defined as consistent leakage at least twice weekly over 3 months and continence as consistent dryness over 3 months. QoL was measured using the validated MDS-derived Social Engagement Scale.

RESULTS

Of 133,111 eligible residents, 90,538 had consistent continence status, 58,850 (65%) of whom were incontinent. UI was significantly associated with worse QoL in residents with moderate cognitive and functional impairment. New or worsening UI over 6 months was associated with worse QoL (odds ratio = 1.46, 95% confidence interval = 1.36-1.57) and was second only to cognitive decline and functional decline in predicting worse QoL.

CONCLUSION

This is the first study to quantitatively demonstrate that prevalent and new or worsening UI decreases QoL even in frail, functionally and cognitively impaired nursing home residents. These results provide a crucial incentive to improve continence care and quality in nursing homes and a rationale for targeting interventions to those residents most likely to benefit.

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Authors+Show Affiliations

Dubeau CE
Section of Geriatrics, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA. cdubeau@medicine.bsd.uchicago.edu
Simon SE
No affiliation info available
Morris JN
No affiliation info available

MeSH

Activities of Daily LivingAgedAged, 80 and overCognition DisordersCohort StudiesCross-Sectional StudiesFemaleHumansMaleNursing HomesQuality of LifeRetrospective StudiesUrinary Incontinence

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

16970638