Stress urinary incontinence is a very common and embarrassing problem for many women today. It can occur at a young age, especially following childbirth.
Many women suffer unnecessarily without realising just how easy this is to deal with because they do not understand the cause of the problem – the cause is simply weakened pelvic floor muscle.
An entire industry has grown up and grown rich around making stress incontinence a big deal – it isn’t!
When you strengthen this muscle the problem can’t exist anymore – it really is that simple. When you think of it isn’t it pure logic?
It is logic that was known in the last century. Dr Arnold Kegel, an American gynaecological surgeon, associate professor of gynaecology at the University of Southern California and Health Commissioner of Chicago who spent more than thirty-two years in the study of the female pelvis and the muscles therein, dicovered that there was a better way to treat most cases of pelvic floor weakness than surgery - resistance exercise.
“There is a better way than surgery to correct most cases of pubococcygeal weakness”, Dr Kegel, TIME magazine, Dec 3rd, 1956.
Dr Kegel stopped doing routine surgery for stress urinary incontinence in his hospital back in 1950 as the results from using resistance exercise with a large number of women were so fantastic.
Many women to date have undergone surgeries for urinary stress incontinence that have left them worse than they were before because they didn’t have knowledge of the Kegelmaster™ or of how using resistance exercise has proven to be so successful. Don’t let it happen to you. Act now, start exercising today against the progressive resistance of the Kegelmaster™. It could be one of the best de
cisions of your life!
The Kegelmaster is registered with the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Authority in the U.K. as a Class 1 medical device.
The content of this website is offered for information purposes only and is not intended in any way to be a substitute for medical advice. It should not be used for diagnosing or treating a health problem. If you have, or suspect you may have a health problem you should consult an appropriately qualified professional health care provider.

