Evaluation of Urinary Catheterization and Urinary Incontinence in a General Nursing Home Population

Abstract
The medical records of 412 [geriatric] residents of 3 southeastern Massachusetts [USA] nursing homes were reviewed to examine the frequency and medical management of urinary incontinence and the indications of chronic urinary catheterization. The mean age of the patients was 84.1 yr. In this study 9.7% of the patients were managed with a urinary catheter, while an indication for catheterization was recorded in the medical records of only 27.5% of these patients. Half of the noncatheterized nursing home patients were transiently or permanently incontinent of urine, but were not catheterized. Incontinent patients without catheters were more likely to require assistance in toileting (75.5 vs. 26.1%) or to have bacteriuria (60.1 vs. 26.1%) than continent patients. Despite the frequency of urinary incontinence, this problem was included in the medical problem list of less than 5% of the incontinent nursing home patients. Urinary incontinence is a frequent medical problem in the nursing home population, but it is rarely recorded and evaluated as a medical problem. Furthermore, indications for urinary catheterization frequently are also not recorded. An explanation for this practice was not determined, but possibilities include a lack of physician knowledge of the evaluation and management of incontinence and a nonaggressive approach to such patients, given their other medical problems.