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Promoting and maintaining urinary continence: Follow‐up from a cluster‐randomized trial of elderly village women in Bangladesh

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TLDR
Pelvic floor and mobility exercises were shown to be effective in managing incontinence in a cluster‐randomized trial of village women in Bangladesh, and continence 12 months after the CRT and exercise program implementation with village paramedics as preceptors is examined.
Abstract
Aims Pelvic floor and mobility exercises were shown to be effective in managing incontinence in a cluster-randomized trial (CRT) of village women aged 60 to 75 years in Bangladesh. The present analysis examines continence 12 months after the CRT and exercise program implementation with village paramedics as preceptors. Methods Women from nine villages in the exercise arm of the CRT were followed-up 12 months after the 6-month intervention. They provided information about exercise since the CRT and a 3-day continence record (3DCR). Posttrial, a further 6-month exercise intervention led by village paramedics was initiated in 20 villages. Women completed the two-item Sandvik severity questionnaire before and after the intervention. Paramedics kept a record of each woman's attendance at the 48 exercise sessions RESULTS: A total of 130 of 150 women from the CRT completed the 12-month follow-up; 61.5% were dry on the 3DCR at follow-up. Total continence was related to the continuation of exercises carried out in the home and absence of urinary tract infection at follow-up. Those exercising at follow-up had an odds ratio (OR) of 3.49 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.86-6.58) of being continent at follow-up. Higher end-of-CRT body mass index was associated with greater follow-up leakage. In the 20-village roll-out, with 316 incontinent women, improvement in both severity and total continence on the Sandvik questionnaire were related to a total number of sessions attended (OR = 1.09; 95% CI, 1.05-1.13). At roll-out, 38.6% achieved continence, comparable to 43.0% in the CRT using physiotherapy preceptors CONCLUSIONS: Group exercise classes led by paramedics resulted in a marked improvement in continence but maintenance requires exercise postintervention.

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Citations
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Age‐friendly interventions in rural and remote areas: A scoping review

TL;DR: The eight age-friendly domains were not explicitly utilised as a guide in the development of interventions for older people in rural and remote settings, and a multisectoral approach that is tailored to address the specific needs of individual communities was required.
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Interventions addressing functional abilities of older people in rural and remote areas: a scoping review of available evidence based on WHO functional ability domains

TL;DR: A literature search was carried out to identify published intervention studies for enhancing functional ability in older people living in rural and remote settings as discussed by the authors , and a total of 67 studies were identified, including quasi-experimental studies, randomized controlled trials, and a descriptive study.
References
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Screening for depression in well older adults: Evaluation of a short form of the CES-D

TL;DR: A short form of the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D), derived and tested for reliability and validity among a sample of well older adults in a large Health Maintenance Organization, showed good predictive accuracy when compared to the full-length 20-item version.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pelvic floor muscle training versus no treatment, or inactive control treatments, for urinary incontinence in women

TL;DR: Overall, the review provides some support for the widespread recommendation that PFMT be included in first-line conservative management programmes for women with stress, urge, or mixed, urinary incontinence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Health workforce skill mix and task shifting in low income countries: a review of recent evidence

TL;DR: Task shifting is a promising policy option to increase the productive efficiency of the delivery of health care services, increasing the number of services provided at a given quality and cost.
Journal ArticleDOI

Long-term effect of pelvic floor muscle exercise 5 years after cessation of organized training

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TL;DR: There was a significant increase in incontinence measured by pad test and leakage index 5 years after cessation of organized pelvic floor muscle exercise, and 75% showed no leakage during stress test, and 70% were satisfied with the condition.
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