Women are “half the sky”, with the development of the economy, the status and role of women are becoming more and more significant, attention to women’s health is not only the doctor’s business, but the responsibility of the whole society. Female stress urinary incontinence has become an internationalized and socialized disease in recent years. With the arrival of our aging society, the impact of female stress urinary incontinence on society is becoming more and more widespread. Let’s spend more time and energy to pay attention to women, pay attention to female stress urinary incontinence, so that patients with stress urinary incontinence get more reasonable treatment, so as to resume normal life and social activities, in order to improve the quality of life of China’s middle-aged and elderly women. What is stress incontinence? Stress urinary incontinence, also known as SUI, is a sudden, involuntary urination that occurs during normal daily activities.SUI is caused by factors such as birth injury and menopause, which result in the relaxation of the muscles of the pelvic floor, reducing the ability of the urethra to control urine. Women have a wider pelvis, weaker muscle support, and a shorter urethra than men’s, averaging only 3cm. Coupled with damage to the pelvic floor muscles from pregnancy and childbirth, and the decline in estrogen levels and atrophy of the urethral mucosa in women after middle age, all these factors result in a woman being more susceptible to urinary incontinence than a man. You may have SUI if you experience urinary discharge during the following activities: 1, coughing, sneezing, or laughing —- mild incontinence; 2, moderate incontinence when walking, exercising, or exerting force by lifting heavy objects —-; and 3, severe incontinence when standing up from a sitting or lying position —-. Can stress incontinence be treated? Stress incontinence is treatable at any age. With the advent of new technologies, the efficacy of stress urinary incontinence has improved dramatically, with the vast majority (about 80%) of patients being completely cured with treatment, and 96% experiencing varying degrees of symptomatic relief. For SUI, the treatment methods include: rehabilitation training of pelvic floor muscles, medication, and surgery. Nowadays, minimally invasive surgery has been further optimized and progressed from TVT and TVT-O in the past to TVT-E and TVT-A, which makes this type of surgical treatment less invasive and more precise, and provides a safe and effective method for treating urine leakage. This procedure has the advantages of less trauma, faster recovery and better efficacy.