A feasibility study of the physiotherapy management of urinary incontinence in athletic women: trial protocol for the POsITIve study

Abstract Background Urinary incontinence (UI) affects up to 40% of adult women within the UK, and pelvic floor muscle training can be effective as a treatment. The prevalence of UI is higher in athletic women than in their sedentary counterparts, but there is little research into reasons for this or...

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Main Authors: K. Gillian Campbell, Mark E. Batt, Avril Drummond
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-07-01
Series:Pilot and Feasibility Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40814-020-00638-6
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spelling doaj-ee8beffa2e124b64a0e5aecb80f51ff02020-11-25T03:20:52ZengBMCPilot and Feasibility Studies2055-57842020-07-016111110.1186/s40814-020-00638-6A feasibility study of the physiotherapy management of urinary incontinence in athletic women: trial protocol for the POsITIve studyK. Gillian Campbell0Mark E. Batt1Avril Drummond2Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of NottinghamCentre for Sports Medicine, Nottingham University HospitalsFaculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of NottinghamAbstract Background Urinary incontinence (UI) affects up to 40% of adult women within the UK, and pelvic floor muscle training can be effective as a treatment. The prevalence of UI is higher in athletic women than in their sedentary counterparts, but there is little research into reasons for this or into treatment within this population. The aim of this study is to investigate the feasibility of conducting a future randomised controlled trial of physiotherapeutic management of UI in athletic women. Methods This is a mixed methods study with three distinct but related phases. Phase 1: Semi-structured interviews with health care professionals in the community will explore current management practices of UI in women and particularly in female athletes in order to inform the control arm of a future study. It will also establish community health care professionals’ understanding of pelvic health physiotherapy. Phase 2: Athletic and regularly exercising women recruited directly from gyms and sports clubs will undergo a course of physiotherapy to manage UI. This will establish study recruitment, eligibility, consent, attendance, attrition, and data completion rates. It will provide information regarding appropriate clinical venues and outcome measures to use for this patient group. Phase 3: Semi-structured interviews with purposefully selected participants from phase 2 will investigate participant satisfaction with recruitment procedures, the intervention, outcome measures and the venues. Further, we will collect data regarding the use of a smartphone ‘app’ for adherence and monitoring of home exercises and participants’ beliefs around randomisation in a future study. We will explore the impact of UI on life and sport in more detail. Discussion This study will establish the ease and acceptability of recruiting athletic women directly from gyms and sports clubs and identify attrition rates. It will also explore the acceptability of the intervention, clinical venues and outcome measures. Data collected will be used to inform a future randomised controlled trial. Trial registration NCT03986411 ( clinicaltrials.gov ). Registered on 14 June 2019http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40814-020-00638-6Urinary incontinencePelvic floor muscle trainingAthletesPhysiotherapy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author K. Gillian Campbell
Mark E. Batt
Avril Drummond
spellingShingle K. Gillian Campbell
Mark E. Batt
Avril Drummond
A feasibility study of the physiotherapy management of urinary incontinence in athletic women: trial protocol for the POsITIve study
Pilot and Feasibility Studies
Urinary incontinence
Pelvic floor muscle training
Athletes
Physiotherapy
author_facet K. Gillian Campbell
Mark E. Batt
Avril Drummond
author_sort K. Gillian Campbell
title A feasibility study of the physiotherapy management of urinary incontinence in athletic women: trial protocol for the POsITIve study
title_short A feasibility study of the physiotherapy management of urinary incontinence in athletic women: trial protocol for the POsITIve study
title_full A feasibility study of the physiotherapy management of urinary incontinence in athletic women: trial protocol for the POsITIve study
title_fullStr A feasibility study of the physiotherapy management of urinary incontinence in athletic women: trial protocol for the POsITIve study
title_full_unstemmed A feasibility study of the physiotherapy management of urinary incontinence in athletic women: trial protocol for the POsITIve study
title_sort feasibility study of the physiotherapy management of urinary incontinence in athletic women: trial protocol for the positive study
publisher BMC
series Pilot and Feasibility Studies
issn 2055-5784
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract Background Urinary incontinence (UI) affects up to 40% of adult women within the UK, and pelvic floor muscle training can be effective as a treatment. The prevalence of UI is higher in athletic women than in their sedentary counterparts, but there is little research into reasons for this or into treatment within this population. The aim of this study is to investigate the feasibility of conducting a future randomised controlled trial of physiotherapeutic management of UI in athletic women. Methods This is a mixed methods study with three distinct but related phases. Phase 1: Semi-structured interviews with health care professionals in the community will explore current management practices of UI in women and particularly in female athletes in order to inform the control arm of a future study. It will also establish community health care professionals’ understanding of pelvic health physiotherapy. Phase 2: Athletic and regularly exercising women recruited directly from gyms and sports clubs will undergo a course of physiotherapy to manage UI. This will establish study recruitment, eligibility, consent, attendance, attrition, and data completion rates. It will provide information regarding appropriate clinical venues and outcome measures to use for this patient group. Phase 3: Semi-structured interviews with purposefully selected participants from phase 2 will investigate participant satisfaction with recruitment procedures, the intervention, outcome measures and the venues. Further, we will collect data regarding the use of a smartphone ‘app’ for adherence and monitoring of home exercises and participants’ beliefs around randomisation in a future study. We will explore the impact of UI on life and sport in more detail. Discussion This study will establish the ease and acceptability of recruiting athletic women directly from gyms and sports clubs and identify attrition rates. It will also explore the acceptability of the intervention, clinical venues and outcome measures. Data collected will be used to inform a future randomised controlled trial. Trial registration NCT03986411 ( clinicaltrials.gov ). Registered on 14 June 2019
topic Urinary incontinence
Pelvic floor muscle training
Athletes
Physiotherapy
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40814-020-00638-6
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