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1.
Fam Pract ; 2024 Jul 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39026426

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: While nearly 50% of adult women report at least one episode of urinary incontinence (UI), most never receive treatment. OBJECTIVE: To better integrate primary and specialty UI care, we conducted (i) an environmental scan to assess the availability of key pathway resources in primary care, (ii) interviews with primary care providers to understand barriers to care, and (iii) a pilot UI care pathway intervention. METHODS: Environmental scan: Clinic managers from all primary care clinics within a Midwestern healthcare system were invited to participate in an interview covering the availability of clinic resources. Provider interviews: Primary care providers were invited to participate in an interview covering current practices and perceived barriers to UI care. Pilot UI care pathway: Patients who screened positive for UI were provided resources for first-line behavioral management. Pilot patients completed questionnaires at baseline, 8 weeks, and 6 months. RESULTS: While many clinics had point-of-care urinalysis (17/21, 81%), most did not have a working bladder ultrasound (14/21, 67%) or on-site pelvic floor physical therapy (18/21, 86%). Providers (n = 5) described barriers to completing almost every step of diagnosis and treatment for UI. The most persistent barrier was lack of time. Patients (n = 15) reported several self-treatment strategies including avoiding bladder irritants (7/15, 47%) and performing Kegel exercises (4/15, 27%). Five patients (33%) requested follow-up care. At 6 months, patients reported small improvements in UI symptoms. CONCLUSION: Promising results from a novel UI care pathway pilot indicate that streamlining UI care may assist primary care providers in the first-line treatment of UI.


Although the majority of women will experience urine leakage at some point during their lives, most will never receive treatment. To better understand this discrepancy, we embarked on a multimodal investigation into the barriers to care and trialed a new treatment pathway in the primary care setting within a large academic medical system in the Midwest. Speaking with the clinic managers from 21 primary care clinics, we determined that many clinics lacked the tools to perform the steps outlined in the professional society guidelines for urinary incontinence diagnosis. Additionally, there was limited access to pelvic floor physical therapy, a proven treatment strategy. Interviews with five primary care providers revealed barriers, most notably lack of time during clinic visits, to almost every step of diagnosis and treatment. Finally, we trialed a care pathway for primary care providers to make it easier to provide patients with self-management education or to refer them to specialist care. Fifteen patients participated in a pilot study, about half reported trying self-management, and about 1/3 requested follow-up care. Streamlining urinary incontinence care at the primary care level may alleviate some of the barriers to patients receiving care.

2.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37881958

RESUMO

IMPORTANCE: Although behavioral modifications, medications, and other interventions can improve urinary incontinence (UI), many women never receive them. OBJECTIVES: To better characterize UI treatment patterns in primary care, we examined prescriptions and referrals to pelvic floor physical therapy (PFPT) and specialist physicians within a large Midwestern academic health system. STUDY DESIGN: Electronic health records were queried to identify a cohort of adult female patients receiving a new UI diagnosis during outpatient primary care visits from 2016 to 2020. Urinary incontinence referrals and referral completion were examined for the overall cohort, and medication prescriptions were examined for women with urgency or mixed UI. Logistic regression was used to assess the association of prescriptions and/or referrals with patient demographics, comorbidities, and UI diagnosis dates. RESULTS: In the year after primary care UI diagnosis, 37.2% of patients in the overall cohort (n = 4,382) received guideline-concordant care. This included 20.6% of women who were referred for further management: 17.7% to urology/urogynecology and 3.2% to PFPT. Most women who were referred attended an initial appointment. Among those with urgency (n = 2,398) or mixed UI (n = 552), 17.1% were prescribed medication. Women with stress (odds ratio [OR], 3.10; 95% CI, 2.53-3.79) and mixed UI (OR, 6.17; 95% CI, 4.03-9.66) were more likely to be referred for further management, and women diagnosed during the COVID-19 pandemic were less likely to be referred for further care (OR, 0.39; 95% CI, 0.29, 0.48). CONCLUSION: Only slightly above 1 in 3 women with a new diagnosis of UI in primary care received guideline-based medications or referrals within 1 year, suggesting missed opportunities for timely care.

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