Litcius/Paper detail

Postmenopausal women’s adherence to pelvic floor muscle exercises over 2 years

Chen Wu, Diane K. Newman, Mary H. Palmer

2021Climacteric12 citationsDOI

Abstract

Objective This study aimed to investigate women’s adherence patterns to pelvic floor muscle exercises (PFME), their associated factors and within-pattern changes.Methods This was a secondary analysis using data collected from 647 women aged 55 years and older in the USA. Women were randomly assigned to either a 2-h class group or an equivalent content 20-min DVD group to receive PFME complemented with adherence enhancement strategies. Adherence was assessed at 3, 12 and 24 months using three self-reported items matching PFME parameters. The k-mean clustering and multinomial logistic regression were used to investigate adherence patterns and their associated factors, respectively. Descriptive statistics were used for within-pattern changes over time.Results Four adherence patterns, A, B, C and D, were identified. Women who displayed optimal adherence to all three aforementioned items, i.e. adherence pattern A, constituted 49.1%, 38.2% and 37.2% of women at 3, 12 and 24 months, respectively. Women with income > US$100,000 were more likely to display adherence pattern A within 12 months. Of women who had adherence pattern A at 3 months, 63.9% and 49.2% continued in this pattern at 12 and 24 months.Conclusions Fewer than half of women displayed adherence pattern A for 2 years. Early optimal adherence predicted women’s subsequent optimal adherence.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMultinomial logistic regressionLogistic regressionDescriptive statisticsPhysical therapyPostmenopausal womenDemographyInternal medicineComputer scienceSociologyMachine learningStatisticsMathematicsPelvic floor disorders treatmentsSexual function and dysfunction studiesMenopause: Health Impacts and Treatments