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BLADDER
DIARY INSTRUCTIONS
The
bladder diary will help you provide valuable information about your symptoms to
your doctor. It will help you keep
track of how much you drink, how often you go to the bathroom, and the amount
you urinate with each trip to the bathroom.
It will also help you keep track of how often you leak urine.
When you are sitting in the examination room, it is frequently difficult
to accurately recall this information. A
diary that documents your need to urinate every 30 minutes, 8 leakage episodes
per day, your need to drink large amounts of fluid per day, or your need to make
several trips to the bathroom to urinate at night, will be of great help to you
and your physician.
Some
women find that the act of completing the bladder diary is actually a valuable
diagnostic and treatment tool for them.
A woman who is not leaking urine might see that she has trained herself
to void every 30 minutes to prevent her bladder from getting very full.
Another woman who is leaking urine might see that she drinks an
incredible amount of fluids, especially in the evening, and this might explain
her need to urinate during the night. She
and her physician can look at the diary together and perhaps discover some
simple alterations in her habits which might help.
Bladder diaries completed after these simple alterations provide patients
with feedback about the effectiveness of treatment.
Please
be as accurate as possible with your diary, and provide your physician with all
the information he/she needs for the number of diary days you have been
requested to complete. Take the diary with you all during those days and write
down the events as they happen. This
will help you work with your doctor to determine the best therapy or combination
of therapies that is right for you.
Instructions:
- Please
record each time you drink fluids, each time you urinate in the toilet, and
each time you accidentally leak urine.
Do this for the number of days your physician has requested you to
complete. Choose days when you
can keep track all of this information for the entire day, and record the
information as it happens.
- Time
– place any information about intake, urinating or leakage in the row
corresponding to the time it occurred
- “What
kind?” – be sure to record the type of beverage, such as milk, juice,
water, or alcoholic drink. Write
“caf” or “decaf” for beverages such as coffee, tea or soft drinks
- “How
much?” – record how much. Keep
in mind that a cup is not the same as a mug, and glasses vary in size.
Fill your usual cup, mug or glass with water, and then pour it into a
measuring cup to get an accurate measure of the amount of fluid you are
drinking.
- “Times
you urinated” – refers to the number of times you went to the toilet to
“pee” during that time.
- “How
much” – although inconvenient, it is very important to measure the
amount you urinate, either cup, ounces, cc’s.
Once your urine has gone into the commode, it is impossible to
estimate the amount. “A
lot” is not at all useful in evaluating your bladder habits.
You may be given you a urine hat that measures the amount you urinate
with each trip to the bathroom.
- “Accidental leaks” – include the loss of any amount
of urine, and note if the amount lost was small, medium or large.
If you normally wear a pad, change it whenever you find yourself damp
or feel yourself leaking. This
will increase your awareness when you are leaking and improve the accuracy
of the diary.
- “Strong
urge” – refers to a sudden urge to void, whether you made it to the
bathroom to void or lost urine on the way to the bathroom.
- “What
were you doing?” – please describe what you were doing when you
accidentally leaked urine, for example, coughing, sneezing, laughing,
reaching, jumping, lifting, rising from a chair, hearing water running, etc.
If the
bladder diary is still confusing to you, please call our office.
The staff will be happy to answer your questions.
Please bring the completed diary with you to your appointment.
If you
have been asked to complete this diary to see if you might qualify for a
specific treatment, please take the time to complete it for the requested number
of days. This is important so that
the physician will have the information needed to determine if the treatment is
a good choice for you. It is also required
by some insurance providers to demonstrate the need for the procedure.
Without this information, the insurance provider may deny payment for the
treatment.
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