Social vulnerability implicated in urinary incontinence burden in women

14 Mar 2025
Social vulnerability implicated in urinary incontinence burden in women

Women who are socially vulnerable appear to have worse urinary incontinence (UI) and poorer incontinence-related quality of life, according to a study.

The study included 1,004 women with UI who complete questionnaires on UI symptoms and incontinence-specific quality of life. Community-level social vulnerability was measured using the social vulnerability index (SVI) from census-level data.

Women living in high SVI (n=136) vs low SVI (n=868) areas were younger (mean age 39.2 vs 49.5 years), less likely to be White (25.0 percent vs 74.2 percent, had lower BMI (mean 25.3 vs 28.5 kg/m2), were less likely to have postsecondary education (77.9 percent vs 80.9 percent), and commonly had a household income below the poverty guideline (26.5 percent vs 10.7 percent).

High SVI was associated with worse urinary symptoms on the Lower Urinary Tract Dysfunction Research Network 10-item Symptom Index (LURN SI-10), worse UI severity on the International Consultation on Incontinence Questionnaire – Urinary Incontinence Short Form (ICIQ-UI SF), and worse overall UI-specific quality of life.

Multivariable logistic regression living in high SVI area increased the odds of having a moderate UI or severe/very severe UI by three- to fourfold (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 3.34, 95 percent confidence interval [CI], 1.56–7.17; p=0.002 and aOR, 4.23, 95 percent CI, 1.76–10.17; p=0.001, respectively).

The odds of having a higher ICIQ LUTSqol score were also greater among women living in high vs low SVI areas (aOR, 10.5, 95 percent CI, 1.03–1.07; p<0.0001).

The findings demonstrate how community-level drivers of health influence urologic outcomes and urinary conditions, and that the SVI measure may be a useful tool to identify communities who may benefit most from targeted policy intervention efforts.

Urology 2025;197:12-17