With the increase in per capita life expectancy and the demand for quality of life, urinary incontinence is a very common chronic disease, with a prevalence of 2%-46% among women aged 15-64 years in the United States and occurring at least once a month in about 29% of working women. The prevalence of urinary incontinence in women aged 30-59 years has been reported to be 25% in China and 38% in women aged 60 years or older. Female stress urinary incontinence (SUI) is a common condition that seriously affects quality of life and is defined by the International Continence Control Society (ISC) as involuntary urine outflow that constitutes a social and health problem and can be objectively verified. It is a common and frequent disease in women, with 35%-45% of women having varying degrees of urinary incontinence symptoms, with stress incontinence accounting for the majority, and with increasing age, the incidence increases and symptoms worsen, seriously affecting the quality of life of patients. However, the number of patients who actually go to the hospital is much lower than the actual number of patients due to their different levels of education and shyness, and the impact of SUI on their quality of life is poorly understood. Although SUI is not a direct threat to patients’ lives, it can seriously affect their quality of life. Overseas studies have reported that such patients are often afraid or refuse to participate in social activities, lose confidence in life, and feel depressed, helpless and anxious. Domestic surveys have also shown that SUI has a wide range of effects on patients’ quality of life, manifested in physical, psychological and social aspects. Patients who use urinary pads feel discomfort or difficulty, deliberately reduce the amount of water they drink in order to reduce the degree of incontinence, or refuse foods and fruits that contain a lot of water. Frequent waking up at night affects sleep, causing mental fatigue during the day and affecting work and study. The smell of urine on the body tends to make patients have low self-esteem, and they dare not participate in normal social and recreational activities. In addition, SUI also has an impact on sexual life, which is manifested by a decrease in the frequency and satisfaction of sexual life, and individual patients who are severely affected cannot have a sexual life. SUI is a disease that affects the quality of life of patients in many ways. It causes a heavy psychological burden and makes patients feel uncomfortable in life, while patients have a serious lack of knowledge about the occurrence factors, treatment and prevention of SUI. Therefore, in order to change the status quo, it is necessary for health educators and medical professionals to vigorously promote the knowledge of SUI through various channels and methods to raise the awareness of SUI patients themselves, their families and the whole society about the disease, so as to improve the consultation rate, health awareness and quality of life of SUI patients in general. As the life expectancy of middle-aged and elderly women increases, it is not only important to maintain beauty, but also to manage “urine” in order to improve the quality of life!