The Prevention of Lower Urinary Symptoms (PLUS) Research Consortium is working to optimize prevention of lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) in women and adolescent females across their life spans. The ability to measure bladder health and key risk and protective factors is crucial to the PLUS mission. To describe and measure the spectrum of bladder health in diverse populations, researchers need a valid and reliable instrument. To date, the Consortium's work on design of a bladder health instrument has been a culmination of expert opinion, information from focus groups, and incorporation of previously validated items and language where appropriate, along with cognitive interviews of participants from the general public. The next step in the consortium's work is to prospectively collect data to test and validate bladder health instrument (BHI) items for inclusion in a final bladder health scale (BHS) that can assess the full range of bladder health of women. This will be through a combination of general population recruitment for completing mailed surveys, clinical population recruitment for completing surveys and an in-person evaluation, and postpartum women.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
1,222
University of Alabama at Birmingham
Birmingham, Alabama, United States
University of California, San Diego
San Diego, California, United States
Yale University
New Haven, Connecticut, United States
Loyola University Chicago
Chicago, Illinois, United States
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States
University of Minnesota
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
Washington University School of Medicine
St Louis, Missouri, United States
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Bladder Health Instrument
Multi-item measurement is used to assess the range of bladder health dimensions as defined by the model of bladder health adopted by the PLUS consortium. It is anticipated that the self-administeredBHI instrument (PAPI or CASI) will consist of approximately 85 items: 53-67 are items all respondents will be asked to answer, and 48 are asked only of women who self-identify as experiencing a specific LUTS. The items cover the range of bladder health dimensions specified by our model.
Time frame: Will be assessed throughout the duration of study, an average of one year.
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