학술논문

Measuring Bladder Health: Development and Cognitive Evaluation of Items for a Novel Bladder Health Instrument.
Document Type
article
Source
The Journal of urology. 205(5)
Subject
Humans
Cognition
Health Status
Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Aged
80 and over
Middle Aged
Female
Urinary Bladder
Interviews as Topic
Young Adult
Diagnostic Self Evaluation
Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms
health status indicators
health surveys
interviews as topic
lower urinary tract symptoms
urinary bladder
Behavioral and Social Science
Urologic Diseases
Clinical Research
Clinical Sciences
Urology & Nephrology
Language
Abstract
PurposeWe describe the item development and cognitive evaluation process used in creating the Prevention of Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms Bladder Health Instrument (PLUS-BHI).Materials and methodsQuestions assessing bladder health were developed using reviews of published items, expert opinion, and focus groups' transcript review. Candidate items were tested through cognitive interviews with community-dwelling women and an online panel survey. Items were assessed for comprehension, language, and response categories and modified iteratively to create the PLUS-BHI.ResultsExisting measures of bladder function (storage, emptying, sensation components) and bladder health impact required modification of time frame and response categories to capture a full range of bladder health. Of the women 167 (18-80 years old) completed individual interviews and 791 women (18-88 years) completed the online panel survey. The term "bladder health" was unfamiliar for most and was conceptualized primarily as absence of severe urinary symptoms, infection, or cancer. Coping mechanisms and self-management strategies were central to bladder health perceptions. The inclusion of prompts and response categories that captured infrequent symptoms increased endorsement of symptoms across bladder function components.ConclusionsBladder health measurement is challenged by a lack of awareness of normal function, use of self-management strategies to mitigate impact on activities, and a common tendency to overlook infrequent lower urinary tract symptoms. The PLUS-BHI is designed to characterize the full spectrum of bladder health in women and will be validated for research use.