Urinary incontinence and enuresis
Emergency referrals
If any of the following are present or suspected, phone 000 to arrange immediate transfer to the emergency department or seek emergent medical advice if in a remote region.
It is proposed that the following conditions should be sent directly to emergency. This is not a list of all conditions that should be sent to the emergency department, it is intended as guidance for presentations that may otherwise have been directed to general paediatric outpatients:
Does your patient wish to be referred?
Minimum referral criteria
Does your patient meet the minimum referral criteria?
Category 1
Appointment within 30 days is desirable
- Poor urinary stream in a boy
- New onset of daytime urinary incontinence in a previously dry child
Category 2
Appointment within 90 days is desirable
- Primary daytime incontinence
Refer to general paediatrics if there are no structural abnormalities.
Refer to paediatric urology or paediatric surgery if concerned with renal or structural abnormalities.
Category 3
Appointment within 365 days is desirable
- Nocturnal enuresis without significant daytime incontinence and unresponsive to medical management
- Children with long term (> 6 months) daytime urinary incontinence who have had previous specialist assessmentRefer to general paediatrics if there are no structural abnormalities.
Refer to paediatric urology or paediatric surgery if concerned with renal or structural abnormalities.
If your patient does not meet the minimum referral criteria
Consider other treatment pathways or an alternative diagnosis.
If you still need to refer your patient:
- Please explain why (e.g. warning signs or symptoms, clinical modifiers, uncertain about diagnosis, etc.)
- Please note that your referral may not be accepted or may be redirected to another service
Other important information for referring practitioners
Not an exhaustive list
- Refer to local care pathway
- If you have a reason to suspect a child in Queensland is experiencing harm, or is at risk of experiencing harm, you need to contact Child Safety Services: https://www.communities.qld.gov.au/
- Sudden onset incontinence who have previously been dry can be a marker of serious pathologies (e.g. DM, GU tumours, spinal cord problems) and should be assessed urgently
- In the majority of cases it is thought inappropriate for children to wait more than 6 months for an outpatient initial appointment
Referral requirements
A referral may be rejected without the following information.
- General referral information
- Is there daytime incontinence of urine?
- Is there nocturnal enuresis?
- Report presence or absence of red flagPresence of red flags
- poor urinary stream in a boy
- Physical examination, including abdominal examination, spine and lower limbs
- Urinalysis (dipstick)
- Fingerpick blood glucose if recent onset of symptoms
Additional referral information (useful for processing the referral)
Highly desirable information – may change triage category.
- What is the impact on the child? (teasing or social exclusion at school, family conflict over wetting, anxiety or distress about incontinence)
- Description of the pattern incontinence:
- is there daytime incontinence? How frequent is the incontinence? Is the incontinence new?
- primary or secondary (>6 months dryness previously)
- What treatments have been tried and efficacy
Desirable information — will assist at consultation
- Family history of nocturnal enuresis or daytime urinary symptoms
- Diet history
- Bowel habit history or history of constipation
- Treatments used for constipation if present
- Developmental history
- Other past medical history
- Immunisation history
- Medication history
- Significant psychosocial risk factors (especially parents mental health, family violence, housing and financial stress, department of child safety involvement)
- Height/weight/head circumference and growth charts with prior measurements if available
- Other physical examination findings inclusive of CNS, birth marks or dysmorphology
- Any relevant laboratory results or medical imaging reports, urinalysis results
- Consider renal tract USS with pre and post void volumes if there is daytime incontinence. Not required for isolated nocturnal enuresis.
Out of catchment
Metro North Health is responsible for providing public health services to the people who reside within its boundaries. Special consideration is made for patients requiring tertiary care or services that are not provided by their local Hospital and Health Service. If your patient lives outside the Metro North Health area and you wish to refer them to one of our services, inclusion of information regarding their particular medical and social factors will assist with the triaging of your referral.
- Impact on employment
- Impact on education
- Impact on home
- Impact on activities of daily living
- Impact on ability to care for others
- Impact on personal frailty or safety
- Identifies as Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander
- To establish a diagnosis
- For treatment or intervention
- For advice and management
- For specialist to take over management
- Reassurance for GP/second opinion
- For a specified test/investigation the GP can’t order, or the patient can’t afford or access
- Reassurance for the patient/family
- For other reason (e.g. rapidly accelerating disease progression)
- Clinical judgement indicates a referral for specialist review is necessary
- Presenting symptoms (evolution and duration)
- Physical findings
- Details of previous treatment (including systemic and topical medications prescribed) including the course and outcome of the treatment
- Body mass index (BMI)
- Details of any associated medical conditions which may affect the condition or its treatment (e.g. diabetes), noting these must be stable and controlled prior to referral
- Current medications and dosages
- Drug allergies
- Alcohol, tobacco and other drugs use
- Full name (including aliases)
- Date of birth
- Residential and postal address
- Telephone contact number/s – home, mobile and alternative
- Medicare number (where eligible)
- Name of the parent or caregiver (if appropriate)
- Preferred language and interpreter requirements
- Identifies as Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander
- Full name
- Full address
- Contact details – telephone, fax, email
- Provider number
- Date of referral
- Signature
- Willingness to have surgery (where surgery is a likely intervention)
- Choice to be treated as a public or private patient
- Compensable status (e.g. DVA, Work Cover, Motor Vehicle Insurance, etc.)
Send referral
Hotline: 1300 364 938
Medical Objects ID: MQ40290004P
HealthLink EDI: qldmnhhs
Mail:
Metro North Central Patient Intake
Aspley Community Centre
776 Zillmere Road
ASPLEY QLD 4034
Health pathways
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