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Pranaya Venkatapuram; Juan C. Angulo-Lozano; Stav Spinzi; Cati Brown-Johnson; Ashley Phord-Toy; Kathleen M. Kan – Journal of School Health, 2024
Background: Pediatric lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) are a set of common childhood problems. Community-level interventions that target behavioral change among children with LUTS can improve symptoms outside of the clinic environment. Parents, navigating the home and school environments, are key in supporting healthy bladder behaviors. Thus,…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, Beliefs, Barriers, Physiology
Boisclair-Fahey, Anne – Journal of School Nursing, 2009
School-age children with dysfunctional elimination syndrome (DES) do not always have school support for their treatment plans, including an every 2-hr voiding schedule. The objective of this study was to increase school support of treatment plans by allowing access to bathrooms, thereby improving continence. An eight-question survey about bathroom…
Descriptors: Individualized Programs, Teacher Participation, School Health Services, Intervention
Ricciardi, Joseph N.; Luiselli, James K. – Child & Family Behavior Therapy, 2003
We report the case of an 11-year-old boy with autism who demonstrated urinary incontinence that appeared to be maintained by social contingencies (adult attention and escape from activity "demands"). Although he wet himself frequently, he also used the bathroom appropriately and made many self-initiated toileting requests. Intervention was…
Descriptors: Sanitary Facilities, Hygiene, Children, Autism

Lundblad, Barbro; Hellstrom, Anna-Lena – Journal of School Health, 2005
Irregular bladder and bowel habits can contribute to urinary and bowel problems. Schoolchildren undergoing treatment for these problems often do not follow the recommendation of regular toilet visits at school, claiming negative perceptions of school toilets. This study examined 6- to 16-year-old schoolchildren's perceptions of school toilets and…
Descriptors: Children, Adolescents, Student Attitudes, Sanitary Facilities