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Study suggests women with incontinence suffer poorer mental health

Study suggests women with incontinence suffer poorer mental health ANI | Updated: Jul 08, 2021 08:55 IST Washington [US], July 8 (ANI): A new study has found that women with urinary incontinence report higher rates of depression and lower levels of self-worth than those who don t suffer from the condition. The research was presented recently at the European Association of Urology Congress, EAU21. The team behind the study is urging clinicians to ask women with incontinence about their mental health and to offer potential treatments. Female urinary incontinence is a common disorder, particularly among older women, but there has been very little research into its impact on women s mental health.

Women with incontinence suffer poorer mental health, says new research

 E-Mail Women with urinary incontinence report higher rates of depression and lower levels of self-worth than those who don t suffer with the condition, according to recent research presented today at the European Association of Urology congress, EAU21. The team behind the study are urging clinicians to ask women with incontinence about their mental health and to offer potential treatments. Female urinary incontinence is a common disorder, particularly among older women, but there has been very little research into its impact on women s mental health. Margarida Manso and colleagues at the University Hospital Centre of São João drew on data from a population-based survey run by the Portuguese Health Ministry every five years, which asks respondents about various aspects of health and wellbeing. They analysed the responses of around 10,000 women aged 18 or above, comparing the prevalence of depression diagnosis, use of mental health consultations, dimensions of mental health

Workers speak out at NHS protests

Workers speak out at NHS protests Leeds Alan is a nurse at Leeds General Infirmary and his partner, Patricia, is a playworker at the same hospital. Lee said, “When the pandemic hit we weren’t given a choice if we wanted to go to ICU [intensive care unit] or not, it was ‘you guys are going and you’ve just got to cope and grin and bear it.’” Patricia and Alan (WSWS Media) Alan described how NHS workers had to cope without any planning in the first stage of the pandemic. “You are looking after a couple of patients and you don’t know how to treat them or what to do. I was moved into a ‘hot’ ward and at first, we just put people into a room and we went in ‘full gown’ and treated what we could. But then people with Alzheimers, dementia and things like that didn’t know what was happening so they were told to keep in a room with no interventions, no kind of communication and no understanding, it was just a horrible situation to be put in, so during that time

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