Bladder health in US women: population-based estimates from the RISE FOR HEALTH study
Smith A, Falke C, Rudser K, McGwin G, Brady S, Brubaker L, Kenton K, LaCoursiere D, Lewis C, Low L, Lowder J, Lukacz E, Mueller E, Newman D, Nodora J, Markland A, Putnam S, Rickey L, Rockwood T, Simon M, Stapleton A, Vaughan C, Wyman J, Sutcliffe S, Consortium P, Brubaker L, Fitzgerald C, Acevedo-Alvarez M, Hardacker C, Hebert-Beirne J, Griffith J, Kenton K, Simon M, Brown O, Geynisman-Tan J, Mueller M, Markland A, Vaughan C, Coyne-Beasley T, Burgio K, Lewis C, McGwin G, Williams B, Lukacz E, LaCoursiere D, Gahagan S, Nodora J, Low L, Miller J, Smith A, Rudser K, Brady S, Fok C, Harlow B, Scal P, Rockwood T, Newman D, Smith A, Berry A, Bilger A, Lipman T, Klusaritz H, Stapleton A, Wyman J, Sutcliffe S, James A, Lowder J, Meister M, Rickey L, Camenga D, Cunningham S, Norton J. Bladder health in US women: population-based estimates from the RISE FOR HEALTH study. American Journal Of Obstetrics And Gynecology 2024, 232: 538.e1-538.e13. PMID: 39521302, PMCID: PMC12056152, DOI: 10.1016/j.ajog.2024.10.044.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsBladder healthGroup of womenHealth dimensionsUS womenUrinary symptomsWell-beingSample of community-dwelling womenMedian scoreCommunity-dwelling womenPopulation-based estimatesPopulation-based sampleScale scoreAbsence of urinary symptomsImpact of urinary symptomsPrevalence of urinary symptomsHealth variablesEligible participantsBaseline surveyFunction Index scoreOptimal healthSymptom toolsOnset of symptomsCohort studyPerceived impactHealth
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