Treatment Overview
Three types of behavioral methods are used to treat urinary
incontinence: bladder training (for urge incontinence), timed voiding, and
prompted voiding (for
functional incontinence).
Bladder training
Bladder training (also called bladder retraining) is used to
treat urge incontinence. Bladder training attempts to increase how long you can
wait before having to urinate. You are taught about the structure of the lower
urinary tract and the causes of incontinence.
A schedule for urinating is established, and you are trained to
resist the first urge to urinate and to refrain from urinating until the
scheduled time. The interval between scheduled bathroom visits is increased
until you can refrain from urinating for several hours.
Timed voiding
Timed voiding (also called habit training) is used to treat
functional incontinence. It sets a schedule for urinating (voiding) that is
determined by your personal habits and does not attempt to increase how long
you can wait before having to urinate or to teach you to resist the urge to
urinate.
Prompted voiding
Prompted voiding is used to treat functional incontinence. It
trains a caregiver to prompt the incontinent person to urinate. The intention
is to decrease the chance of accidents by making the incontinent person aware
of the need to urinate periodically. Prompted voiding is usually used in
combination with timed voiding for people who are insufficiently aware of their
bodily functions, such as people who have
dementia.
What To Expect After Treatment
These methods are often successful in eliminating or decreasing
urinary incontinence.
Why It Is Done
Behavioral methods may be used to treat:
- Urge incontinence (using bladder
training).
- Functional incontinence (using timed and prompted
voiding).
How Well It Works
Bladder training
- Bladder training does not work well for
everyone, but some people benefit significantly.
- Many people who
use bladder training have fewer symptoms of incontinence. For some people, the
incontinence completely disappears.
Timed voiding
Timed voiding reduces the frequency of incontinence accidents in
the majority of the people who use this method.
Prompted voiding
People who use prompted voiding generally have 1 to 2 fewer
incontinence accidents per day.
Risks
No risks are associated with these treatments.
What To Think About
Behavioral methods such as bladder training require a high level of
motivation.
Successful prompted voiding requires a committed caregiver.
Bladder training is often more successful than medicine in the
treatment of urge incontinence.
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