Consider changes to your OAB treatment plan

Meet Your Guide
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Debbie Cheskiewicz
Advocate

After a year of urinary accidents, Debbie Cheskiewicz of New York decided not to put her bladder health on the back burner anymore. Although overactive bladder (OAB) is a sensitive subject, she learned to think of it as something that’s just like any other condition. “Using pads or underwear for OAB is just part of life for people,” she says. She tried a couple of medications before finding one without bothersome side effects. And she also does exercises to strengthen her pelvic floor muscles.

Show Sources

SOURCES:

Debbie Cheskiewicz, Lockport, NY. 

Leslie M. Rickey, MD, MPH, associate professor of urology and of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive sciences, Yale School of Medicine. 

Urology Care Foundation: “Overactive Bladder (OAB).”

Mayo Clinic: “Overactive bladder.”

Therapeutic Advances in Urology: “Update on the management of overactive bladder.” 

Urology: “Multicomponent Intervention for Overactive Bladder in Women: A Randomized Clinical Trial.”

Cleveland Clinic: “Overactive Bladder,” “What is a urologist?” 

Reviews in Urology: “Diagnosis of Interstitial Cystitis/Painful Bladder Syndrome in Patients With Overactive Bladder Symptoms.” 

Neurology and Urodynamics: “Health disparities and access to advanced therapy for overactive bladder.” 

UW Health: “MyChart: Manage your healthcare from anywhere.” 

Northwestern Medicine: “What Is Sacral Neuromodulation (SNM)?”