Safety and Clinical Relevance
Cross-source consensus on Safety and Clinical Relevance from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Uses
Benefits
Risks & contraindications
Other
Highlighted claims
- All adverse effects during the RCT are recorded and documented. — Clinical effectiveness of biofeedback for treating stress urinary incontinence in women: protocol for a randomised controlled trial
- Participants with inability to follow commands or pacemakers are screened out during recruitment. — Clinical effectiveness of biofeedback for treating stress urinary incontinence in women: protocol for a randomised controlled trial
- PelviSense-assisted PFMT is positioned for populations excluded from or poorly served by intravaginal adjunct therapies. — Clinical effectiveness of biofeedback for treating stress urinary incontinence in women: protocol for a randomised controlled trial
- Biofeedback is described as safe across age groups and having no absolute contraindications. — Clinical effectiveness of biofeedback for treating stress urinary incontinence in women: protocol for a randomised controlled trial
- If effective, non-invasive biofeedback could reduce the socioeconomic burden of SUI by improving adherence and outcomes at scale. — Clinical effectiveness of biofeedback for treating stress urinary incontinence in women: protocol for a randomised controlled trial