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Patricia S. Goode

Researcher at University of Alabama at Birmingham

Publications -  165
Citations -  10179

Patricia S. Goode is an academic researcher from University of Alabama at Birmingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Urinary incontinence & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 51, co-authored 164 publications receiving 9150 citations. Previous affiliations of Patricia S. Goode include Emory University & United States Department of Veterans Affairs.

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Non-surgical management of stress urinary incontinence: ambulatory treatments for leakage associated with stress (ATLAS) trial:

TL;DR: This trial will provide useful information to help counsel women with stress and mixed incontinence about the relative efficacy and satisfaction with pessary, behavioral therapy and both treatments combined, and a combination of the two treatments combined.
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Refractory Urgency Urinary Incontinence Treatment in Women: Impact of Age on Outcomes and Complications

TL;DR: Younger women experienced greater absolute continence, symptom improvement, and fewer urinary tract infections; both older and younger women had beneficial urgency urinary incontinence episode reduction, similar rates of other treatment adverse events, and improved quality of life.
Journal Article

Sleep-disordered breathing as a mechanism for nocturia: preliminary findings.

TL;DR: The data showed that African-American women had significant associations between episodes ofNocturia and symptoms of obstructive sleep apnea, poor sleep quality, naps, and lower urinary tract symptoms, thus failing to support the notion that nocturia or sleep-disordered breathing are prostate or gender related.
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Urinary incontinence in older adults.

TL;DR: Evaluation for urinary incontinence involves a focused history, physical examination, a urinalysis, and measurement of postvoid residual volume, if indicated, and office-based treatments include behavioral approaches and medications.
Journal Article

A comparison of an opaque foam dressing versus a transparent film dressing in the management of skin tears in institutionalized subjects.

TL;DR: This opaque foam dressing is a superior wound dressing for skin tears and correlated only with dressing type, age and age, and no other factor was associated with the healing outcome.