Urinary incontinence is a disease that seriously affects the quality of life of women, and in view of its serious impact on the physical health, mental health and social interaction of female patients, the International Continence Control Society (ICS) in the mid-1990s considered the disease to be one of the top five diseases in the world. Many women think that their urinary leakage is a rare disease, but in fact, worldwide, more than 50% of women will experience the pain of urinary incontinence at some point in their lives. This is an inevitable consequence of women’s own physiological characteristics, such as a short and straight urethra. Epidemiology of female stress urinary incontinence: In urinary incontinence, stress urinary incontinence (SUI) is the most common, accounting for about 70% of female urinary incontinence. The incidence of female urinary incontinence in Western countries is as high as 30 to 60%, and the incidence is higher in older women, according to the World Health Organization estimates that there are about 400 million to 500 million middle-aged and older patients with urinary incontinence worldwide. In the United States, urinary incontinence affects about 13 million people. About 27% of women in Germany have varying degrees of urinary incontinence, the incidence of women under 65 years of age is 10% to 25%, women living in homes for the elderly, often incontinence, the incidence of more than 50% . Guangzhou female stress incontinence prevalence survey results show that the prevalence of female stress incontinence in Guangzhou is 34.5%, the prevalence of female incontinence in Beijing is 46.5%, and the incidence of women over 50 years of age is even more than 60%. In Taiwan, more than 3 million women suffer from urinary incontinence. However, due to the lack of medical knowledge and the influence of traditional concepts, female incontinence tendency to seek medical treatment is very low, only 24.5%. China’s female urinary incontinence rate is even lower, a study shows that China (mainland) female medical treatment rate of only 14.3 percent