Measuring Bladder Health: Development and Cognitive Evaluation of Items for a Novel Bladder Health Instrument

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Abstract

Purpose:We describe the item development and cognitive evaluation process used in creating the Prevention of Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms Bladder Health Instrument (PLUS-BHI).Materials and Methods:Questions assessing bladder health were developed using reviews of published items, expert opinion, and focus groups' transcript review. Candidate items were tested through cognitive interviews with community-dwelling women and an online panel survey. Items were assessed for comprehension, language, and response categories and modified iteratively to create the PLUS-BHI.Results:Existing measures of bladder function (storage, emptying, sensation components) and bladder health impact required modification of time frame and response categories to capture a full range of bladder health. Of the women 167 (18-80 years old) completed individual interviews and 791 women (18-88 years) completed the online panel survey. The term "bladder health" was unfamiliar for most and was conceptualized primarily as absence of severe urinary symptoms, infection, or cancer. Coping mechanisms and self-management strategies were central to bladder health perceptions. The inclusion of prompts and response categories that captured infrequent symptoms increased endorsement of symptoms across bladder function components.Conclusions:Bladder health measurement is challenged by a lack of awareness of normal function, use of self-management strategies to mitigate impact on activities, and a common tendency to overlook infrequent lower urinary tract symptoms. The PLUS-BHI is designed to characterize the full spectrum of bladder health in women and will be validated for research use.

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Rickey, L. M., Constantine, M. L., Lukacz, E. S., Lowder, J. L., Newman, D. K., Brubaker, L., … Rockwood, T. (2021). Measuring Bladder Health: Development and Cognitive Evaluation of Items for a Novel Bladder Health Instrument. Journal of Urology, 205(5), 1407–1414. https://doi.org/10.1097/JU.0000000000001581

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