TY - JOUR
T1 - Diet strategies used by women to manage fecal incontinence
AU - Hansen, Joy L.
AU - Bliss, Donna Zimmaro
AU - Peden-McAlpine, Cynthia
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - Fecal incontinence occurs in community-living women who are elderly, as well as younger women, particularly after vaginal childbirth. Little is known about how women manage fecal incontinence in their everyday lives. Ten women who had fecal incontinence for at least 1 year participated in an audio-taped interview in a phenomenological study. Diet modification was identified as a key strategy for managing fecal incontinence. Various food types were avoided, restricted, or used as remedies. The meanings that the women applied to the diet strategies for managing fecal incontinence had 4 themes: restricting diet and eating patterns, eating and dealing with the consequences, treating fecal incontinence with foods and fluids, and lacking therapeutic guidance regarding diet modifications for fecal incontinence. The results of this study suggest that the continence nurse specialist recognize the important role and meaning of diet as a self-care strategy for women with fecal incontinence and address diet in their assessment and management recommendations.
AB - Fecal incontinence occurs in community-living women who are elderly, as well as younger women, particularly after vaginal childbirth. Little is known about how women manage fecal incontinence in their everyday lives. Ten women who had fecal incontinence for at least 1 year participated in an audio-taped interview in a phenomenological study. Diet modification was identified as a key strategy for managing fecal incontinence. Various food types were avoided, restricted, or used as remedies. The meanings that the women applied to the diet strategies for managing fecal incontinence had 4 themes: restricting diet and eating patterns, eating and dealing with the consequences, treating fecal incontinence with foods and fluids, and lacking therapeutic guidance regarding diet modifications for fecal incontinence. The results of this study suggest that the continence nurse specialist recognize the important role and meaning of diet as a self-care strategy for women with fecal incontinence and address diet in their assessment and management recommendations.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/33748700458
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/33748700458#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1097/00152192-200601000-00007
DO - 10.1097/00152192-200601000-00007
M3 - Review article
C2 - 16444104
AN - SCOPUS:33748700458
SN - 1071-5754
VL - 33
SP - 52
EP - 61
JO - Journal of Wound, Ostomy and Continence Nursing
JF - Journal of Wound, Ostomy and Continence Nursing
IS - 1
ER -