(Press-News.org) Orlando, Fla - A new national survey by the Orlando Health Advanced Rehabilitation Institute finds most Americans believe it’s normal for women to experience pain, pressure and incontinence after having children. But experts say these are actually signs of pelvic floor issues, and while they are extremely common, affecting about a third of women, they are not normal.
“When we say it's not normal, what we mean is it's not something you should have to live with. It's something you can rehabilitate and improve,” said Tessa Ladd, OTR/L, an occupational therapist at Orlando Health who specializes in treating pelvic floor dysfunction. “By strengthening and coordinating pelvic floor muscles and learning how to breathe and move in a way that supports the pelvic floor, these symptoms that so many women live with for years can be drastically improved.”
The survey, conducted by Ipsos, found that 71% of Americans agree it’s normal for women to have some urinary leakage after having kids, and more than half (51%) believe it’s normal for women to experience pain during sex after they’ve recovered from childbirth — both telltale signs of pelvic floor damage.
The pelvic floor is the group of muscles and ligaments that act as a “hammock” to support the vagina, uterus, bladder and rectum. When they become damaged — most commonly brought on by pregnancy, childbirth or aging — they can cause incontinence, as well as pain and pressure that occurs when these organs slip from their normal position, known as prolapse.
“Childbirth puts a lot of trauma on the body, but just like with any other injury, muscles and tissues should have the ability to recover and support the internal organs,” Ladd said. “If that doesn’t happen, we can step in and help. The muscles within the pelvic floor are skeletal muscles. They’re something that we do have control over, just like our biceps or our calves, and we have the ability to strengthen, lengthen and relax them.”
The survey also found that 71% of respondents believe women should start working out to strengthen their abs and pelvic floor as soon after childbirth as possible, something Ladd warns can be counterproductive, as women feel societal pressure to “bounce back” after having a baby.
“You can begin to do some deep breathing and learn correct body mechanics in that early postpartum phase, but it’s also important to allow your body time to heal and not to do too much too fast,” Ladd said.
About a month after having her second child, Nicole Gerardi-Lukens suddenly felt immense pressure in her pelvis and went to the hospital. After being diagnosed with bladder prolapse, she worried she’d need to undergo surgery and a lengthy recovery with a four-year-old and a newborn at home.
“I was so relieved when I was referred to a pelvic floor therapist,” Gerardi-Lukens said. “Tessa taught me things like how to breathe when I pick things up, and it made me realize how much pressure I was putting on my pelvic floor with everyday tasks. I didn’t always notice how much of that pressure I was feeling until I learned how to relieve it and could really feel the difference.”
After working with Ladd, Gerardi-Lukens can lift her child without the fear of pain or leakage, and says pelvic floor therapy is something she wishes she knew about sooner.
“You know your body, and you know when something’s not right,” Gerardi-Lukens said. “As moms, we so often put everyone else first and even laugh off things like leakage as just a part of motherhood, but you have to decide if these are things you want to deal with forever. And if they’re not, seek the help of a pelvic floor therapist.”
But before women can get the medical help they need, they have to acknowledge the problem. Talking to your health care provider is the first step to finding solutions.
“If we have a problem with our knee, we could talk to anyone about it without shame, without feeling uncomfortable or weird about it,” Ladd said. “Everyone has pelvic floor muscles, yet it's something many women shy away from talking about, even with medical providers. When we open up about the symptoms we’re struggling with and understand that so many of us have this shared experience, we can help women live their lives free from pain and symptoms caused by these common and treatable issues.”
Survey Methodology
This survey was conducted online within the United States by Ipsos on the KnowledgePanel® from May 31 to June 2, 2024, and surveyed 1,020 U.S. adults ages 18 and older. This poll is based on a nationally representative probability sample and has margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.3 percentage points at the 95 percent confidence level, for results based on the entire sample of adults. For complete survey methodology, including weighting variables and subgroup sample sizes, please contact: christopher.moessner@ipsos.com.
About Orlando Health
Orlando Health, headquartered in Orlando, Florida, is a not-for-profit healthcare organization with $9.6 billion of assets under management that serves the southeastern United States and Puerto Rico.
Founded more than 100 years ago, the healthcare system is recognized around the world for Central Florida’s only pediatric and adult Level I Trauma program as well as the only state-accredited Level II Adult Trauma Center in Pinellas County. It is the home of one of the nation’s largest neonatal intensive care units, one of the only systems in the southeast to offer open fetal surgery to repair the most severe forms of spina bifida, the site of an Olympic athlete training facility and operator of one of the largest and highest performing clinically integrated networks in the region. Orlando Health has pioneered life-changing medical research and its Graduate Medical Education program hosts more than 350 residents and fellows.
The 3,487-bed system includes 33 hospitals and emergency departments – 26 of which are currently operational with seven coming soon. The system also includes nine specialty institutes, skilled nursing facilities, an in-patient behavioral health facility under the management of Acadia Healthcare, and more than 375 outpatient facilities that include physician clinics, imaging and laboratory services, wound care centers, home healthcare services in partnership with LHC Group, and urgent care centers in partnership with CareSpot Urgent Care. More than 4,950 physicians, representing more than 100 medical specialties and subspecialties have privileges across the Orlando Health system, which employs more than 29,000 team members and more than 1,400 physicians.
In FY 23, Orlando Health cared for 197,000 inpatients and 6.6 million outpatients. The healthcare system provided nearly $1.3 billion in total impact to the communities it serves in the form of community benefit programs and services, Medicare shortfalls, bad debt, community-building activities and capital investments in FY 22, the most recent period for which this information is available.
Additional information can be found at http://www.orlandohealth.com, or follow us on LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram and Twitter @orlandohealth.
END
Survey finds most americans believe pain and urinary leakage is normal for women after having children
Experts stress that pelvic floor damage is usually treatable without surgery and that women don’t have to live with uncomfortable symptoms
2024-07-15
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Opioid prescribing to reduce overdoses, misuse
2024-07-15
New research aims to help reduce the quantity of unused prescription opioids after emergency department visits and lessen the risk of opioid misuse and overdose. The study is published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal) https://www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.231640.
VIEW EMBARGOED ARTICLE
Overprescribing is linked to opioid misuse and overdose, with household supplies of opioids associated with an increased risk of overdose, as many people do not dispose of unused medications safely. In Canada, ...
Health research on South Asian communities must be led by South Asians
2024-07-15
Funding agencies in Canada need to review their policies for evaluating research proposals to ensure that South Asian research is conducted by South Asians, write authors in a commentary in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal) https://www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.231189
VIEW EMBARGOED ARTICLE
Much of the health research conducted in Canada on South Asian diaspora communities has historically been marked by unequal power relations, rather than meaningfully engaging and benefitting these communities.
As the largest and fastest growing diverse ...
Big boost for new epigenetics paradigm: CoRSIVs, first discovered in humans, now found in cattle
2024-07-15
A study published in Genome Biology opens new possibilities to improve production efficiency in the cattle industry and potentially animal agriculture more broadly. A team of researchers at Baylor College of Medicine, Cornell University and the USDA discovered that, like humans, cattle have CoRSIVs. CoRSIVs are regions of the genome carrying chemical markers on the DNA that provide information that may allow farmers to predict and select desirable cattle characteristics, such as milk production, female fertility and resistance to disease.
“Most people know that each person ...
Cancer is the biggest health concern among the public, poll reveals
2024-07-15
Late detection biggest worry in relation to cancer diagnosis, with 55% of people wanting to see future advances in early cancer detection
Public overwhelmingly support use of AI to tackle cancer
43% of people recognise major impact universities can have on reducing deaths from cancer
Cambridge University partnering with NHS to build revolutionary new Cambridge Cancer Research Hospital
Two-thirds of the public say they are very or somewhat worried about being told they have the disease – higher than ...
Doctors suffering burnout need compassion not blame, says top GP
2024-07-15
Doctors, nurses and other healthcare staff suffering burnout should be shown compassion and not blamed for being unwell, according to a leading GP.
Clare Gerada says employers often treat physicians as ‘naughty schoolchildren’ when they go sick or suffer mental health problems. Professor Dame Gerada, past president of the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP), is calling for more comprehensive guidance that focuses on ‘kindness’ and ‘sensitivity’.
The doctor, who helped found mental health charity, Doctors in Distress, addresses the need for major reform in a new book aimed at reforming care for doctors and nurses ...
Study on post-COVID-19 condition: Which factors have an impact on the risk
2024-07-14
Early on during the coronavirus pandemic, there were reports of cases of persistent post-infection symptoms. The World Health Organization (WHO) refers to such new or persistent symptoms twelve weeks after a corona infection that cannot be explained by other causes as a post-COVID-19 condition. In a recent study, scientists led by the University Medicine Halle evaluated the information from 109,707 participants in the German National Cohort (NAKO Gesundheitsstudie) on their self-reported health status with respect to post-infection symptoms. The survey took place in autumn 2022, in retrospect of the pandemic.
At the time of the survey, more than 80 percent of respondents had ...
Artificial intelligence outperforms clinical tests at predicting progress of Alzheimer’s disease
2024-07-13
Cambridge scientists have developed an artificially-intelligent tool capable of predicting in four cases out of five whether people with early signs of dementia will remain stable or develop Alzheimer’s disease.
The team say this new approach could reduce the need for invasive and costly diagnostic tests while improving treatment outcomes early when interventions such as lifestyle changes or new medicines may have a chance to work best.
Dementia poses a significant global healthcare challenge, affecting over 55 million people worldwide ...
ReMDO announces inaugural Piedmont Triad Regenerative Medicine Engine Ecosystem Summit in Winston-Salem, North Carolina
2024-07-12
Winston-Salem, North Carolina – July 12, 2024 - The RegenMed Development Organization (ReMDO) invites researchers, industry and academia to the inaugural Piedmont Triad Regenerative Medicine Engine Ecosystem Summit (The Summit) on Monday, August 12th in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Registration is open to new and current partners, with required onboarding for prospective organizations to be completed by August 12. The summit will consist of speaker sessions, discussion panels, breakouts, and networking events with complete details ...
HarvestHub app tackles supply chain, food insecurity issues
2024-07-12
The COVID-19 pandemic infiltrated almost every aspect of society and life in 2020, even in ways people wouldn’t have immediately expected. Stores that typically have no problem stocking shelves were struggling to keep pace with the sudden demand for cleaning supplies along with everything from toilet paper to Sriracha chili sauce.
While these issues aren’t as devastating as the larger health ramifications, they did shed new light on supply chain weaknesses and how that system adapts to rapid and vast market shifts. Factory closures ...
Mathematics outreach program awarded Dolciani grant
2024-07-12
Two years after launching a new mathematics outreach program, a team of Texas A&M University professors has been awarded a Dolciani Mathematics Enrichment Grant to support their program's efforts to promote math enrichment for high school students.
The Program for Research in Mathematics (PReMa) was established in 2022 by four members of Texas A&M’s Department of Mathematics: Dr. Sherry Gong, Dr. Wencai Liu, Dr. Kun Wang and Dr. Zhizhang Xie. The program, directed by Wang, targets high school students living in Texas and neighboring states. Designed to cultivate a deep appreciation and understanding of advanced ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Optical biosensor rapidly detects monkeypox virus
New drug targets for Alzheimer’s identified from cerebrospinal fluid
Neuro-oncology experts reveal how to use AI to improve brain cancer diagnosis, monitoring, treatment
Argonne to explore novel ways to fight cancer and transform vaccine discovery with over $21 million from ARPA-H
Firefighters exposed to chemicals linked with breast cancer
Addressing the rural mental health crisis via telehealth
Standardized autism screening during pediatric well visits identified more, younger children with high likelihood for autism diagnosis
Researchers shed light on skin tone bias in breast cancer imaging
Study finds humidity diminishes daytime cooling gains in urban green spaces
Tennessee RiverLine secures $500,000 Appalachian Regional Commission Grant for river experience planning and design standards
AI tool ‘sees’ cancer gene signatures in biopsy images
Answer ALS releases world's largest ALS patient-based iPSC and bio data repository
2024 Joseph A. Johnson Award Goes to Johns Hopkins University Assistant Professor Danielle Speller
Slow editing of protein blueprints leads to cell death
Industrial air pollution triggers ice formation in clouds, reducing cloud cover and boosting snowfall
Emerging alternatives to reduce animal testing show promise
Presenting Evo – a model for decoding and designing genetic sequences
Global plastic waste set to double by 2050, but new study offers blueprint for significant reductions
Industrial snow: Factories trigger local snowfall by freezing clouds
Backyard birds learn from their new neighbors when moving house
New study in Science finds that just four global policies could eliminate more than 90% of plastic waste and 30% of linked carbon emissions by 2050
Breakthrough in capturing 'hot' CO2 from industrial exhaust
New discovery enables gene therapy for muscular dystrophies, other disorders
Anti-anxiety and hallucination-like effects of psychedelics mediated by distinct neural circuits
How do microbiomes influence the study of life?
Plant roots change their growth pattern during ‘puberty’
Study outlines key role of national and EU policy to control emissions from German hydrogen economy
Beloved Disney classics convey an idealized image of fatherhood
Sensitive ceramics for soft robotics
Trends in hospitalizations and liver transplants associated with alcohol-induced liver disease
[Press-News.org] Survey finds most americans believe pain and urinary leakage is normal for women after having childrenExperts stress that pelvic floor damage is usually treatable without surgery and that women don’t have to live with uncomfortable symptoms