PelvicToner the only pelvic floor exerciser to be available on UK GP prescription

January 12, 2011

For the first time GPs can now offer a more effective and speedier treatment option to the millions of new mums and women of all ages that present with the distressing symptoms of Stress Urinary Incontinence (SUI).

This is the first major advance in the NHS primary care treatment of SUI for over 60 years.

Following a highly successful clinical trial and a robust cost-benefit evaluation, the NHS has decided that the PelvicToner™ will be available on prescription with effect from January 2011. The PelvicToner will be the only product available under the brand new Drug Tariff category of Pelvic Toning Devices.

 NICE Best Practice currently recommends that women be individually assessed, trained and supervised by a specialist in a three month programme of Pelvic Floor Exercise (PFEs). But very few women receive this Gold Standard Treatment and are generally just offered a simple instruction sheet to use unsupervised. 

In clinical trials, published in the British Journal of Urology International, the PelvicToner was shown to be as effective as Supervised PFEs with the added benefit that it helped women confidently identify their pelvic floor and exercise more effectively by squeezing against a mild resistance. The result is a very high level of satisfaction with over 80% of PelvicToner users reporting significant improvement within a couple of weeks.  

The use of the PelvicToner should also bring significant cost benefits to the NHS. Prescribing the PelvicToner in the first instance could and should save the NHS £millions (there are 4,000,000 women in the UK with the problem) and enable the NHS to focus scarce resources such as Continence Advisors, specialist physiotherapists and surgeons on the most needy cases. 

The author of the BJUI article and the research leader, Professor Marcus Drake of the Bristol Urology Institute, says: “continence service provision is patchy and this sort of product empowers women, gives them better privacy and the prospect of not wasting their time. In our study the PelvicToner aided women to identify their pelvic floor confidently. It increases patient choice and may promote subsequent compliance and sustained efficacy.”

 Specialists in the field have long recognized the weaknesses in the current system. Clinical estimates suggest that a third of women cannot identify their pelvic floor and how to squeeze it in the first place, so giving them just an instruction sheet is of no real benefit.  

Many specialists note that the general level of training is poor. Supervised PFEs do not expect to see significant improvements inside three months and women just given a sheet of paper rarely see any improvement at all. All this leads to frustration, low motivation and very poor compliance. In contrast, PelvicToner users report rapid improvement and demonstrate eagerness to exercise on a regular basis to maintain a strong and healthy pelvic floor. 

Barry Fowler, MD of the manufacturer SPM Ltd, said: ”This recognition is a major boost for the PelvicToner and the women who are happy to consult their GP for advice. But there are still millions of women who are too embarrassed to even consult with their doctor because of the taboo that surrounds stress incontinence or the belief that it is something which they must suffer in silence. These women can now help themselves and purchase with confidence knowing that the PelvicToner is cheap, simple to use and of proven effectiveness.” 

The PelvicToner™ is a simple, portable exercise device that works by strengthening the walls of the pelvic floor through mild resistance training. This tightens the muscles around the neck of the bladder and prevents urine leaking out when you cough, sneeze, laugh or make a sudden movement. 

 The PelvicToner costs just £31.99 (including p&p) and can be purchased from www.pelvictoner.co.uk or from 0117 968 1414.  

NOTES FOR EDITORS

For more information contact Barry Fowler at press@spml.biz. 0117 968 0171 or 07768 233670

Stress incontinence occurs as a result of reduced support for the bladder, usually by ‘sagging’ pelvic floor muscles commonly brought-on by childbirth, the natural effects of the menopause, obesity and a lack of regular, effective pelvic floor exercise. 

It accounts for 65 per cent of female urinary incontinence and affects around 4 million women in the UK. One in ten women in the workplace suffer, as do a third of all new mothers. 

Weak pelvic floor muscles are also a key cause of a lacklustre sex life and PelvicToner exercises have been shown to significantly improve the ability to achieve orgasm. In a user survey, 80% of respondents reported an improved sex life and 62% also reported that their partner noticed improved vaginal tightness. 

The benefits of an effective pelvic floor exercise regime have been acknowledged since Arnold Kegel launched his eponymous exercises in 1948. However, the key recommendations of his research went largely unnoticed and few women appreciate how to exercise correctly. When first shown the PelvicToner, Paul Abrams, Professor of Urology at the Bristol Urological Institute said:

 “It is 60 years since Arnold Kegel proposed pelvic floor exercises as a treatment for stress incontinence but a simple, effective method of putting all his principles into practice has eluded us. The PelvicToner™ seems to meet all the requirements that Kegel envisaged – it is a simple, patient-friendly, progressive resistance exercise device and provides feedback to the patient that the correct muscles are being engaged.” 

Research shows that women will suffer the symptoms of stress incontinence for an average of 4 years or more before consulting their GP. Most women will not discuss the problems with their partner, relatives or friends and suffer in silence. Greater openness and media coverage of the issues will thus benefit millions of women. 

The two-year randomised study of the PelvicToner at the Bristol Urological Institute (BUI) monitored participants for 16 weeks. The BUI, Britain’s leading urodynamics research centre, is based at Southmead Hospital, Bristol.

 The researchers said the PelvicToner was ”easy to use” and proved ”particularly helpful” in the majority of cases. A total of 86 per cent gave a satisfaction rating of seven-out-of-ten or higher. 86 per cent of participants who used the PelvicToner reported a ”significant” improvement in their condition.

 In supporting the submission to NHS Prescription Services and the robust evaluation that ensued, Professor Drake noted: “Primary care does not provide supervised pelvic floor exercises except in rare cases. The vast majority of women are handed a leaflet and not examined. Supervised PFEs are known to be better than that rather poor service. Thus, in being equivalent to supervised PFEs, PelvicToner is better than unsupervised. The review should not have neglected the distinction between supervised and unsupervised; supervised means that women are actively taught the PF contraction by a highly trained healthcare professional (and hence it is expensive).”

There are a variety of products that purport to strengthen the pelvic floor, but the clinical trials confirm that the PelvicToner is much more effective than expensive electrical stimulation devices and weighted vaginal cones. These alternatives are not recommended by NICE and are not universally advocated by clinicians as they have yet to produce sufficient evidence of efficacy. 

The PelvicToner is the first and only pelvic toning device to be recognised by the NHS and a special new category of ‘Pelvic Toning Devices’ has been created on the Drug Tariff IXA..

ENDS


PelvicToner recommended in new clinical research

January 21, 2010

News Release: Press Association Jan 18, 2010: New research just published in the British Journal of Urology proposes improvements to the UK NHS recommended treatment of stress incontinence.

 This is welcome news for millions of women who can expect quicker relief from their distressing symptoms and for NHS bosses who can deal with this major health problem more effectively and with much reduced demands on scarce NHS resources. 
 
The author of the article, Professor Marcus Drake of the Bristol Urology Institute, highlights fundamental weaknesses in the current pelvic floor muscle exercise treatment recommended by NICE and suggests that improvements and greater success rates can be achieved if women are offered the PelvicToner™ to encourage a more effective and sustained exercise regime.

The PelvicToner ™ works by strengthening the walls of the pelvic floor through mild resistance training which tightens the muscles around the neck of the bladder and prevents urine leaking out when you cough, sneeze, laugh or make a sudden movement.

While the technique itself isn’t new, the device – which is designed to be used at home – is said to be considerably more effective than other pelvic trainers on the market.

 In a recent clinical trial, 86 per cent of participants who used the PelvicToner reported a ”significant” improvement in their condition.

 Researchers at the Bristol Urological Institute (BUI) said it was ”easy to use” and proved ”particularly helpful” in the majority of cases.

 Their findings were published last week in the British Journal of Urology International.

The BJUI article includes a comprehensive discussion of Pelvic Floor Muscle Exercise (PFME). The research author, Professor Marcus Drake, highlights the weaknesses often associated with PFME which leads to many women failing to derive the full benefits from the treatment.

 The research concludes that the use of the PelvicToner can help overcome poor training, lack of patient confidence and poor compliance with the exercise recommendations.

 Key points noted by the research are that:

  • the PelvicToner gives “confidence to women that they were correctly contracting their pelvic floor, and this may be helpful encouragement when a woman is starting out on a regime of PFME.”
  •  the biofeedback given by the PelvicToner “may be particularly helpful to demonstrate to the woman that she is carrying out the PFME appropriately.”
  • the PelvicToner is particularly relevant to those women “who do not consult their physician and wish to maintain confidentiality regarding their SUI symptom.”

The research concludes that even when used in its weakest settings, the PelvicToner is not inferior to PFME and confers significant other benefits when used as an adjunct to PFME.

In order to simplify the study and to enable direct comparison and analysis with PFME, the PelvicToner was only tested at its weakest resistance setting and at the same level of activity as recommended by the NHS guidelines. Users of the PelvicToner consistently report rapid and dramatic improvements in their symptoms when using the PelvicToner as recommended – with the number of repetitions and the amount of resistance being increased in line with ability.

This confirms the superiority of the PelvicToner compared to other ‘pelvic toning’ devices on the market. The discussion notes that previously published research has concluded that other methods offered as adjuncts and widely marketed to the public, such as electro stimulation, vaginal cones and biofeedback, are inferior to PFME and lack robust evidence of their efficacy.


User survey update

December 29, 2009

The PelvicToner online user survey is proof that effective pelvic floor exercises can help in many situations:

“I have been very surprise by the new sensations. It works really”

“I am absolutely delighted and wish I’d found it sooner”

“I had stress incontinence, this is a very good product and has made a huge difference to my everyday life.  I can go for a walk and hold it in a lot better, I am still a beginner and there is more improvement to come, I am sure of that.  Thanks for giving me my life back!”

“I would strongly recommend using a Pelvic Toner. It is easy to use, discreet and simply to clean. Wish I had known about it years ago!”

Do you experience stress incontinence? Don’ delay – visit www.pelvictoner.co.uk today


Is Female Sexual Dysfunction a myth?

May 20, 2008

Women who fear they are sexually dysfunctional will be relieved by the preliminary results of a new study that demonstrates that effective pelvic floor exercises can help women improve their sex lives. The exercises take just 5 minutes a day but the results can be ’mind blowing’!

Over 80% of women who followed the simple PelvicToner exercise programme reported an improved sex life within 4 weeks – source: preliminary results from The 2008 Orgasm Survey. The 2008 Orgasm Survey aims to raise awareness of the sex benefits of a strong pelvic floor.

These findings reinforce research published in 1952 but consistently overlooked ever since. Arnold Kegel, of the eponymous pelvic floor exercises, reported that over 60% of women who thought they were sexually dysfunctional achieved orgasm for the first time when trained in a simple resistance exercise method.

The PelvicToner™ encapsulates Kegel’s method by helping women identify and isolate the correct pelvic floor muscle and exercise effectively against resistance.

Unfortunately few women are aware of the role that slack vaginal muscles play in a lacklustre sex life. If they were, there would be a far greater incentive to exercise effectively!

In the survey, over 86% admitted that they would like to be shown how to exercise properly in order to improve their sex life!

GP and sexual health expert Dr Sarah Brewer said: ““In many ways, we have failed women ever since 1952 by not telling them how to exercises correctly. The secret – as identified by Kegel – is to improve muscle tone by exercising against resistance.

“People understand that to improve muscle it’s no good just lifting our arms in the air – no matter how many repetitions we do. We have to introduce some form of resistance to get good results.

“Encouraging women to squeeze repeatedly when sat on the bus or to use devices that do not offer resistance, means many women are wasting their time and increasing their sense of frustration.”

Links:

www.iwabo.co.uk

>www.mypelvicfitness.com

 


Why every woman needs a PelvicToner

May 16, 2008

The PelvicToner is a progressive resistance vaginal exerciser. The PelvicToner has been designed to help you identify and isolate your pubococcygeal muscle and then to exercise it effectively by squeezing against a resistance.

It is essential that you exercise your pelvic floor correctly. This will help alleviate or prevent the distressing and embarrassing symptoms of stress incontinence and it could also have a major impact on your sex life – by giving you much more control of your vaginal muscles and improving the contact between you and your partner.

As you get stronger you can increase the resistance and increase the number of squeezes you perform in each set of exercises. Do this on a regular (daily) basis and you will soon notice a massive improvement in your bladder control and your sex life.

If you would like to know more about the PelvicToner or would like to share your experiences then we would like to hear from you.

If you have used the PelvicToner and want to complete the 2008 Orgasm Survey click here.

You can read more about the PelvicToner at the following websites:

>www.pelvictoner.co.uk

>www.mypelvicfitness.com

>www.iwantabetterorgasm.co.uk

>www.betterkegelexercises.com

 


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