| Executive Summary Table 1: Summary of Evidence on Behavioural Interventions for the Treatment of Urinary Incontinence in Community-Dwelling Seniors |
| Table 1: Studies Reporting Urinary Incontinence as a Possible Predictor of Long-Term Care Home Admission* |
| Table 2: Recent Canadian Surveys on Prevalence of Urinary Incontinence |
| Table 3: Characteristics of Behavioural Interventions for the Treatment and Management of Urinary Incontinence |
| Table 4: Quality of Evidence of Included Studies* |
| Table 5: Existing Systematic Reviews on Caregiver-Dependent Techniques for Urinary Incontinence* |
| Table 6: Studies on Caregiver-dependent Techniques for Urinary Incontinence* |
| Table 7: Existing Systematic Reviews on Patient-Directed Behavioural Techniques for the Treatment of Urinary Incontinence* |
| Table 8: Studies on Multicomponent Patient-Directed Behavioural Techniques for Urinary Incontinence* |
| Table 9: Studies on PFMT Interventions for Urinary Incontinence* |
| Table 10: Existing Systematic Review of the Role of the Nurse in Treating Urinary Incontinence* |
| Table 11: Studies with Interventions for Urinary Incontinence Led by Nurse Continence Advisors* |
| Table 12: Before/After IC3 Project–Improving Continence Care in the Community* |
| Table 13: Summary of Evidence on Behavioural Interventions for the Treatment of Urinary Incontinence in Community-Dwelling Seniors |
| Table 14: Quality of Trials on Caregiver-Dependent Behavioural Techniques According to GRADE* |
| Table 15: Quality of Trials on Patient-Directed Behavioural Techniques and the Role of the Nurse Continence Advisor / Clinical Nurse Specialist According to GRADE* |
| Table 16: Cost to Implement Program (2008 Cdn $) |