Caregiver insights on challenges and needs in fecal incontinence products: a mixed methods study
Lanlan Yu, Fengming Hao, Jie Li, Yingjie Hu, Fei Xiong, Ling Chen, Wenzhi Cai

TL;DR
This study examines how caregivers use fecal incontinence products in hospitals and identifies challenges like training gaps and economic barriers that affect product choice and patient outcomes.
Contribution
The study introduces a mixed-methods approach to uncover how different caregiver groups choose fecal incontinence products and highlights the need for tailored training and improved product access.
Findings
Family caregivers' product choices are influenced by income and living arrangements.
Nursing assistants rely heavily on prior training when selecting products.
Product mismatches and training gaps contribute to suboptimal fecal incontinence management.
Abstract
This study explores the real–world use and challenges of fecal incontinence (FI) collection products—both absorbent items (pads, diapers) and dedicated fecal-collection devices with adhesive fixators—among long-term, bed-bound hospital patients, while also considering broader public-health implications. It seeks to identify barriers to optimal product use and to offer recommendations for improving incontinence management outcomes. Effective FI management is essential to patient wellbeing and to preventing healthcare-associated infections (HAIs). Although multiple FI collection products are available, their use in long-term hospital settings remains suboptimal, largely because of caregiver training gaps and limited resources. This mixed-methods study used an explanatory sequential design. Quantitative data were gathered through online and paper-based surveys administered to caregivers…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPelvic floor disorders treatments · Pressure Ulcer Prevention and Management · Stoma care and complications
