News Archives - Bladder & Bowel UK https://www.bbuk.org.uk/category/news/ Mon, 02 Sep 2024 12:41:54 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://www.bbuk.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/cropped-BBUK-browser-icon-32x32.png News Archives - Bladder & Bowel UK https://www.bbuk.org.uk/category/news/ 32 32 Buzzers for Bedwetters Project https://www.bbuk.org.uk/buzzers-for-bedwetters-project/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=buzzers-for-bedwetters-project Mon, 02 Sep 2024 11:46:41 +0000 https://www.bbuk.org.uk/?p=24104 Karen Irwin, and Davina Richardson Specialist Nurses, welcomed Juliette Rayner, CEO of ERIC, The Childrens Bowel and Bladder Charity and Dr,Claire Jones, Senior Lecturer in the History of Medicine and Project Lead from the University of Kent, to Bladder and  Bowel UK. The project’s key aims is to break down the stigmatisation of urine incontinence, through the […]

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Karen Irwin, and Davina Richardson Specialist Nurses, welcomed Juliette Rayner, CEO of ERIC, The Childrens Bowel and Bladder Charity and Dr,Claire Jones, Senior Lecturer in the History of Medicine and Project Lead from the University of Kent, to Bladder and  Bowel UK. The project’s key aims is to break down the stigmatisation of urine incontinence, through the use of history.

It is the purpose of this project to uncover and unite the fragmentary discourses surrounding the incontinent body that began to emerge in multiple professions and industries from the 1870s, including public health, psychology, psychoanalysis, childrearing, social care, social work, medicine (including surgery, pharmacology and gerontology) and commerce (through the sale of remedies and technologies aimed at curing incontinence) 

Urinary incontinence has been common to the human experience throughout history, but it was from the late nineteenth century that the incontinent body came to be identified as a significant moral problem in Britain.  

The rise of the public health movement signalled the state’s desire for greater control over the nation’s water supply, the simultaneous medicalisation, commercialisation and stigmatisation of incontinence demonstrated a shift towards the desire for greater control of the flow of urine from the individual body. Incontinence was deemed polluting to the body politic, but fixable by new surgical, pharmaceutical, psychological and technological interventions. When not fixable, incontinent bodies were deemed burdensome by the sufferers themselves, their families, the medical profession and the state and given as a major cause of hospital bed-blocking and mental health problems.  

Yet, while urine incontinence became an intense subject of focus between 1870 and 1970, it has attracted little historical research. Incontinence has gained fragmentary interest amid growing sociological work on the leaky body, but historical work on the body remains largely segmented by class, gender, sexuality, race and (dis)ability and aspects of health and disease maintained within bodily boundaries; medical histories too are only just beginning to take incontinence seriously. 

It is thus the purpose of this innovative project to go beyond the boundaries of historical subfields by identifying the significance of the incontinent body to medical, commercial and public discourses and tracing how these discourses shaped experiences of incontinence chronologically and through the life cycle, from toddler to pensioner. By drawing on interdisciplinary approaches from sociology and anthropology and by drawing together histories of medicine, the body and social and cultural history, this project will demonstrate the centrality of incontinence, and by extension the urinary body, to everyday life in modern Britain.  

The research, which is designed to help reduced current social taboos on incontinence, intends to look at:

1) How significant was incontinence to contemporary discourses in commerce, medicine and associated fields between 1870 and 1970?  

2) To what extent were these discourses stigmatising and thus responsible for creating new social norms surrounding incontinence and urination more broadly?  

3) To what extent did such discourses shape individual and collective experiences of incontinence?  

4) How did such discourses and experiences change throughout the life course and vary according to class, race, gender and ability?  

5) How might this novel focus on incontinence offer new perspectives on the history of the body, the social history of medicine and to wider humanities and social science disciplines? 

6) How might this historical work challenge the contemporary stigmatisation of incontinence? 

We spent this first meeting reviewing papers, looking at the history, having discussions and formulating a plan for our next project meeting in November to be  hosted by Juliette in Bristol. We will keep you updated as the project progresses.    

If anyone is interested in learning more about the project, or in taking part, then they can get in touch directly with Dr Claire Jones  – C.L.Jones-26@kent.ac.uk 

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Bladder & Bowel UK proud to be chosen for ‘Giving Something Back Campaign’ https://www.bbuk.org.uk/giving-something-back-campaign-2017/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=giving-something-back-campaign-2017 Fri, 02 Jun 2017 13:10:39 +0000 http://www.bladderandboweluk.co.uk/?p=1349 Bladder & Bowel UK were delighted to be presented with a cheque for £500 from B. Braun’s ‘Giving Something Back Campaign’. As part of an ongoing aim to help improve the lives of patients and make a positive impact in our local communities, the B. Braun Emerald Prescription service offer a charitable donation to two […]

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Bladder & Bowel UK were delighted to be presented with a cheque for £500 from B. Braun’s ‘Giving Something Back Campaign’. As part of an ongoing aim to help improve the lives of patients and make a positive impact in our local communities, the B. Braun Emerald Prescription service offer a charitable donation to two chosen charities each year. Since the campaign started in 2012, they have supported a wide variety of charities and made significant donations to help these organisations carry on the great work they complete on a daily basis. 

For 2017, B. Braun have chosen Bladder & Bowel UK for the campaign.

Sarah Marubbi, Product Manager at B. Braun said:

Each year we choose charities that have a link to the work we are doing via the conditions B. Braun products help assist. So this year we are delighted to help Bladder & Bowel UK, who make such a difference to people’s lives.

Emerald‘s main aspire to make people’s lives as convenient as possible. They are able to achieve this by providing you with a personalised and reliable home delivery service. Their deliveries include ostomy and continence products, which are delivered in an unbranded packaging so that they maintain they discreet service.

Emerald Logo

Once your prescription has been ordered, Emerald is sure to have your products with you within 48 hours. Their dedicated team over friendly customer service Monday until Friday.

Karen Irwin, Service Manager highlighted:

The team at Bladder & Bowel UK aim to make a positive impact on people’s lives, and we are delighted to receive this charitable donation from B. Braun Emerald Prescription Services.

We create strong relationships with people and organisations throughout the UK who are as committed as our wider team to making a difference for people with bladder and bowel problems.

Our Specialist Nurses and Product Specialists have developed an extensive amount of knowledge and experience to help you and your patients.

Thank you B. Braun for choosing Bladder & Bowel UK.


For more information about B. Braun Emerald there are the following contact methods available:

Patient Line – 0800 163 007

Nurse Line – 0800 526 116


Email

emeraldservice.bbmuk@bbraun.com


Website

www.bbraun-emerald.co.uk

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