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BLADDER HEALTH BLOG

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Two older women smiling and walking together on a sunny neighborhood sidewalk, one holding a coffee cup. Both enjoy the confidence provided by discreet incontinence products for women. Trees and houses line the street in the background.

How Aging Changes Bladder Control — What Most People Don’t Expect

As an RN who’s worked in geriatrics for over 14 years, I know first hand that changes in bladder control can be a common part of aging. However, what I’ve also learned is that the treatment and management of these changes differ depending on whether they are due to aging or other conditions.
If you’re experiencing more frequent trips to the bathroom or sudden, intense urges to urinate, you might be wondering what is going on and what you can do about it. Let’s talk through some of the changes that might be going on in your body and how you can be better prepared to manage your bladder control.

A smiling older woman sits on a bed in a cozy, softly lit bedroom, holding an absorbent product for bladder leaks. A basket with more pads sits nearby, while books, a glass of water, and an alarm clock rest on the bedside table.

Why Your Incontinence Product May Not Be Working Like It Used To

Most people assume that when an incontinence product leaks, the product itself failed. In reality, what often changes first is everything around it. Bladder leakage is not static. The amount of urine, how quickly it’s released, when leaks happen, and even how the body moves during sleep can all shift over time. A product that worked well six months ago may suddenly struggle under conditions it was never designed to handle.
This is especially common with overnight leakage, changes in mobility, medication adjustments, or shifts in bladder control related to aging and health conditions.
One of the biggest misconceptions is that absorbency alone determines performance. In reality, fit, absorption speed, body position, and wear duration all influence whether a product holds up in real-world situations.

Four women of different ages sit closely together outdoors by water and greenery, smiling at the camera. The group appears joyful and relaxed, confidently enjoying the sunny day thanks to absorbent products for bladder leakage in women.

Why So Many Women Put Themselves Last — and Why It Matters

Women are often the caregivers, planners, problem-solvers, and emotional anchors for everyone around them. They manage households, careers, children, aging parents, relationships, schedules, and responsibilities that rarely stop.

And somewhere in the middle of taking care of everyone else, many women quietly stop taking care of themselves.

They ignore symptoms. Delay appointments. Push through exhaustion. Normalize discomfort. Tell themselves they’ll deal with it “later.”

But later can turn into years.

This Women’s Health Month, it’s worth asking:
When was the last time you truly prioritized your own health

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A smiling caregiver measures the waist of an elderly person using a measuring tape. The elderly person is standing with the aid of a walker. Both are indoors, and the atmosphere appears supportive and caring.

How to Measure for Adult Diapers and Pull-Ons

Poorly fitting incontinence products can cause frustrating leakage issues. It’s essential to determine the best fit for the wearer, keeping in mind that different brands of disposable incontinence products vary very differently in their sizing. You might be size large in one brand, and a completely different size in another.
This article will help you find the best fit for your specific needs:

An older woman with short gray hair sleeps peacefully in bed, wearing a pink satin pajama top and hugging a soft gray blanket. A glass of water, medicine bottles, and items to help manage incontinence cost sit on the nightstand beside her.

Managing Overnight Incontinence for a Better Night’s Sleep

A good night’s sleep plays an important role in maintaining overall health, comfort, and emotional well-being. For individuals managing incontinence, nighttime can sometimes feel uncertain. Overnight leaks may interrupt sleep, create concern about bedding or clothing, and make mornings feel more stressful than restful. These experiences are common, and they are something many adults navigate at different stages of life.

NAFC Intimacy Blog

Incontinence & Intimacy: Reconnecting After Bladder Leaks

For many people, sex and intimacy is about far more than physical closeness. It’s about confidence, connection, vulnerability, and feeling comfortable in your own body.
When urinary incontinence enters the picture, those feelings can quietly change.
While often discussed as a physical condition, incontinence can deeply affect emotional well-being and romantic relationships, something many people experience but few talk about openly.

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NAFC Intimacy Blog

Incontinence & Intimacy: Reconnecting After Bladder Leaks

For many people, sex and intimacy is about far more than physical closeness. It’s about confidence, connection, vulnerability, and feeling comfortable in your own body.
When urinary incontinence enters the picture, those feelings can quietly change.
While often discussed as a physical condition, incontinence can deeply affect emotional well-being and romantic relationships, something many people experience but few talk about openly.

Saving Money Blog

The Financial Impact of Incontinence: Costs You May Not See

Incontinence is often discussed in terms of symptoms and quality of life but for many people, it also brings a steady (and sometimes surprising) financial burden. Beyond the obvious cost of pads, protective underwear, and skin-care products, there can be added expenses from laundry, missed work, caregiving needs, and medical visits. The good news: understanding where the costs come from is the first step toward reducing them—and getting the right treatment can be a cost-saver, not just a health improvement.

Talking To doctor Blog article

Speaking Up About Incontinence

For many people living with bladder leaks, the hardest part isn’t the symptoms themselves.
It’s deciding to talk about them.
Bladder leaks can feel too small to mention, too embarrassing to explain, or not “serious enough” to justify a doctor’s visit. Many people quietly manage symptoms for years—adjusting their routines, limiting activities, and hoping things don’t get worse.
If this sounds familiar, you’re not alone. And you’re not wrong for feeling this way.

WOMEN'S HEALTH

Four women of different ages sit closely together outdoors by water and greenery, smiling at the camera. The group appears joyful and relaxed, confidently enjoying the sunny day thanks to absorbent products for bladder leakage in women.

Why So Many Women Put Themselves Last — and Why It Matters

Women are often the caregivers, planners, problem-solvers, and emotional anchors for everyone around them. They manage households, careers, children, aging parents, relationships, schedules, and responsibilities that rarely stop.

And somewhere in the middle of taking care of everyone else, many women quietly stop taking care of themselves.

They ignore symptoms. Delay appointments. Push through exhaustion. Normalize discomfort. Tell themselves they’ll deal with it “later.”

But later can turn into years.

This Women’s Health Month, it’s worth asking:
When was the last time you truly prioritized your own health

A person in gray sweatpants stands with hands covering their crotch, showing a large wet stain indicative of bladder leakage. A bed with white sheets appears in the background, highlighting the need for absorbent products or bladder leakage pads.

Is Bladder Leakage a Normal Part of Aging?

There is a quiet, widespread belief among women that at a certain age, after children, after menopause, and after “a lot of living,” bladder leaks just happen. You carry a pad. You know which restrooms are the cleanest. You skip the trampoline park with the grandkids. You don’t say anything to your doctor because, honestly, what would they even say? This is just…aging.

Using appropriate absorbent products and a gentle skin-care routine may help support skin integrity.
The medical community is clear: urinary incontinence is common, but it is not a normal or inevitable part of aging. The Mayo Clinic Health System states it directly that “although urine incontinence is common, it’s not normal.” The condition has causes, those causes have treatments, and those treatments, for many women, work remarkably well.

Your voice Matters

Men with stress urinary incontinence are invited to complete a confidential 20-minute survey about daily symptoms, treatment experiences, and quality of life.