The Voiding School is a simple educational intervention to treat children with daytime incontinence or enuresis.The purpose of this study is to implement the intervention in primary care, child welfare clinics. Half of the participated children will receive treatment according the Voiding School protocoll and half of them will receive treatment as usual. Patient outcomes are evaluated by measuring changes in wetting episodes. Aim is also to evaluate the implementation process.
Children under school age attend to regular visits in Child welfare clinics for health examination and guidance. If the child have daytime incontinence or enuresis during the yearly visit at the age of 5 or 6, he or she is eligible for participating the study aiming to implement and evaluate the Voiding school intervention. In the Voiding school the children are educated in groups of 4-6 children with child-oriented methods highlighting learning by doing in order to achieve better bladder control. Usual care includes individual advice concerning voiding habits and general life-style advice.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Children are educated on the kidneys, bladder and bowel function, the importance of regular voiding and drinking habits, and avoidance of constipation. Balloons, books, videos, animations, the pictures of a satisfied and irritated bladder and a poo-cars formula track are used to exemplify the function of urinary and defecation systems. During toilet visits children are given advise about an adequate and relaxed toilet posture with the help of little bench under the feet if needed. Each child also make their own timetable for peeing, pooing, and water drinking times, which they then should learn to follow in day-care, pre-school and at home. At the end of each session child, parent and public health nurse/urotherapist discuss any individual advice and the homework for the next time.
Child welfare clinics
Helsinki, Finland
Changes in wetting episodes
Changes of amount of dry days and nights, is performed with the modified Finnish version of the ICCS one-week voiding diary (©2015 International Children's Continence Society). Children with the help of their parents are asked to mark X in the diary every time they are voiding; M=a little amount of wetting, MM=a bigger amount of wetting, Y=night-time wetting. Bowel movements are marked with K.
Time frame: at baseline, after intervention (3 months), follow-up 6 months after baseline
Changes in symptoms accosiated with incontinence
Symptom score for dysfunctional elimination syndrome (NLUT-DES questionnaire) is used to evaluate children's voiding and defecation habits associated with incontinence. It is a 14-item 5-point Likert scale questionnaire (0=no symptoms 4=severe symptoms, except item 3: 0=5-6 times, 2= 3-4 or 7-8 times, 4= 1-2 or over 8 times). Official translation into Finnish was performed for this study.
Time frame: at baseline, after intervention (3 months), follow-up 6 months after baseline
Changes in quality of life
Quality of life of 5-6 years old children with incontinence is measured with Finnish version of Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQL™ 4.0) Used version is intended for parents of 5-7 years old children. Generic score scales (physical, emotional, social, school functioning) consist of 21-item 5-point Likert scale (0=never 4=always).
Time frame: at baseline, after intervention (3 months), follow-up 6 months after baseline
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