NITES, a nocturnal bladder score to aid diagnosis during the transition to older age care

Author:

Bower Wendy F.123ORCID,Da Silva Alisha2ORCID,Gibson William4ORCID,Wagg Adrian4,Whishaw D Michael1

Affiliation:

1. Sub‐Acute Continence Service, Home First, Ambulatory & Complex Care Services The Royal Melbourne Hospital Parkville Victoria Australia

2. Department of Physiotherapy The Royal Melbourne Hospital Parkville Victoria Australia

3. Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Science University of Melbourne Parkville Victoria Australia

4. Division of Geriatric Medicine University of Alberta Edmonton Alberta Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAs adults transition to older age, bothersome nocturnal lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) become common. There is need for a reliable assessment metric to detect and measure specific symptoms.ObjectiveTo subject the nocturnal LUTS score for older individuals, Nocturia, Incontinence, Toileting and Enuresis Symptom Score (NITES), to psychometric analysis.Material and MethodsFactor analysis of the metric was conducted with completed questionnaires from 151 older individuals who were either admitted to a tertiary hospital or attending an outpatient continence clinic. Test re‐test reliability involved 18 older community dwelling individuals attending a Geriatrician clinic completing the metric at two timepoints separated by at least 1 week. Intra‐class correlation coefficients were determined for reliability of each factor and item.ResultsThe NITES metric was completed by 98 hospitalized older individuals and 53 attending a continence clinic (mean age 83.2 years [SD 7.0]). Factor analysis demonstrated that one item had a floor effect and two items had poor endorsement. After test re‐test reliability analysis, a further three items were removed: one due to poor correlation between timepoints and two demonstrating inadequate internal consistency. The final NITES metric is comprised of three factors: Sleep 4‐items, Incontinence 4‐items, and Personal Bother 2‐items. A 4‐item short form for symptom screening was extracted from the longer measure.ConclusionThe final NITES metric is a 10‐item questionnaire with an embedded 4‐item short symptom screen. It has utility utilized to detect nocturnal bladder symptoms in both community dwelling and hospitalized older adults.

Publisher

Wiley

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