U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

NCBI Bookshelf. A service of the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health.

MacArthur C, Bick D, Salmon V, et al. Midwifery-led antenatal pelvic floor muscle exercise intervention to reduce postnatal urinary incontinence: APPEAL research programme including a feasibility and pilot cluster RCT. Southampton (UK): National Institute for Health and Care Research; 2024 Nov. (Programme Grants for Applied Research, No. 12.09.)

Cover of Midwifery-led antenatal pelvic floor muscle exercise intervention to reduce postnatal urinary incontinence: APPEAL research programme including a feasibility and pilot cluster RCT

Midwifery-led antenatal pelvic floor muscle exercise intervention to reduce postnatal urinary incontinence: APPEAL research programme including a feasibility and pilot cluster RCT.

Show details

List of supplementary material

Report Supplementary Material 1.

World package 3 mapping of behaviour change wheel, theoretical domains framework and behaviour change techniques to inform intervention development

Report Supplementary Material 2.

Women’s questionnaire

Report Supplementary Material 3.

Champion manual and role description

Supplementary material can be found on the NIHR Journals Library report page (https://doi.org/10.3310/TJDH7946).

Supplementary material has been provided by the authors to support the report and any files provided at submission will have been seen by peer reviewers, but not extensively reviewed. Any supplementary material provided at a later stage in the process may not have been peer reviewed.

Copyright © 2024 MacArthur et al.

This work was produced by MacArthur et al. under the terms of a commissioning contract issued by the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care. This is an Open Access publication distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 4.0 licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. For attribution the title, original author(s), the publication source – NIHR Journals Library, and the DOI of the publication must be cited.

Bookshelf ID: NBK609150

Views

  • PubReader
  • Print View
  • Cite this Page
  • PDF version of this title (2.2M)

Other titles in this collection

Recent Activity

Your browsing activity is empty.

Activity recording is turned off.

Turn recording back on

See more...