Urinary Incontinence, Urge Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparing Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction With the Health Enhancement Program in the Treatment of Urinary Urge Incontinence in Older Adult Women: A Pilot Feasibility and Randomized Controlled Trial
The purpose of this study is to examine the feasibility of conducting a pilot randomized controlled trial comparing mindfulness-based stress reduction with the health enhancement program on symptoms of urinary urge incontinence in older adult women, and to establish preliminary efficacy of these two approaches on symptoms of urinary urge incontinence.
The overarching goal of this research is to evaluate potential treatment options for older
women with symptoms of urinary urge incontinence, with a specific focus on Mindfulness-Based
Stress Reduction, a promising therapeutic approach in preliminary studies and one
increasingly used to treat symptoms associated with brain-visceral interactions. Feasibility
and preliminary efficacy will be tested in two randomized study arms: a Mindfulness-Based
Stress Reduction intervention group and a Health Enhancement Program intervention comparison
group.
This research study will explore the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of treating urinary
urge incontinence in older adult women with mindfulness-based stress reduction in comparison
to the health enhancement program through a randomized controlled pilot study. Feasibility
determinants will include both research feasibility (recruitment, retention, treatment
fidelity) and intervention feasibility (acceptability, tolerability, treatment adherence).
Clinical outcomes to evaluate preliminary intervention efficacy will include severity of
urinary urge incontinence symptoms, bother of urinary urge incontinence symptoms, perceived
stress, and perceived level of self-efficacy of self-management of urinary urge incontinence
symptoms. Preliminary efficacy of the intervention will also be evaluated with the Patient
Global Impression of Improvement, a process measure that rates the patient's "response of a
condition to a therapy" (Ryan, n.d., p. 1).
This combined pilot feasibility study and randomized controlled trial will evaluate specific
factors crucial to the success of a large trial to evaluate the effect of Mindfulness-Based
Stress Reduction on urinary urge incontinence in older adult women. Moore (2011) recommended
that the pilot study design parallel the future larger study, particularly when evaluating
feasibility in the pilot study. The capacity for hypothesis testing, or establishing causal
inference is limited in a pilot study due to insufficient power; however, the information
from efficacy testing is vital in informing future larger scale clinical trials. This study
will serve as a necessary step for the development of effectiveness trials of
Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction in treatment of urinary urge incontinence in older adult
women by informing and guiding evaluation, implementation, and dissemination.
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