Female urination device

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Woman using the Urinella, a type of female urination device, to adapt to standard men's room urinals

A female urination device, female urination aid, or stand-to-pee device (STP) is a device which aids a female to urinate while standing upright. Variations include basic disposable funnels to more elaborate reusable designs. Female urination devices have increased in popularity since the 1990s. They are used for outdoor pursuits, and for medical reasons.

In addition, fixed installation and relocatable urinals are available for use by girls and women. Some designs require the user to supply their own personal female urination device, while other designs do not have this expectation.

Portable devices

Women use The Whiz at trough urinal, at Glastonbury Festival

Female urination devices are marketed towards several distinct groups. For sports and recreation they are sold for camping, traveling, festivals, long car journeys, and any kind of outdoor pursuit where the toilet facilities are absent or less than desirable.

Since 2005, several female urination devices have appeared on the market. Some of the products include: Freshette, GoGirl, PStyle, SheWee, Whiz Freedom, and Urinelle. Products come in a variety of designs and materials such as plastic, rubber, silicone and paper. Some products are reusable and some are disposable. Several devices have been marketed for medical applications, and are sometimes available on prescription.

Occupationally, urinary devices are used in the armed forces and other outdoor jobs. Some brands are NATO approved, and are supplied to military personnel.[citation needed]

Female urination devices are sometimes used by trans men as "stand-to-pee" devices.[1] More discreet solutions such as the "Snee-Kee" are specifically marketed for this purpose. Some stand-to-pee devices mimic the appearance of a penis and double as packers.

Female urinals

Urinals for men or women have advantages of quick and hygienic use, water conservation, and less need for physical space. Speed of use can be especially important when there is high peak demand, such as in music festivals, theatrical events, sports stadiums, discos, dance clubs, and convention halls.

Special fixed installation designs for female urinals have long been available, supplemented more recently by portable designs. Some designs have been considered "unisex", usable by either gender. The fixed designs are typically used by women in a "hovering" posture, standing over them with knees slightly bent.

In addition, small portable urinals including sealable collection containers have been available in female-only and unisex versions. They are often used for travel when immediate disposal is difficult. Initially, medical or hospital devices were pressed into service, but designs specially made for travel eventually appeared. They are used in small aircraft, and for extended stakeouts, such as in a hunting blind or a wildlife observation station.

Conventional urinals which have been designated exclusively for female urination device users have become popular in recent years, including at some major public events where providing adequate toilet facilities is difficult, such as outdoors festivals. To expedite usage, trough urinals may be installed, which the women are expected to use while standing, with small personal female urination devices.

Pinkpop 2000 was the first event to accommodate large numbers of female urination devices,[citation needed] and the practice has now spread to events in the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, Canada, Finland, Ireland, and the UK.[2]

Manufacturers

Brand Origin Material
GoGirl US Silicone (flexible)
Lady J US Plastic (rigid)
Lady P Czech Republic Plastic (rigid)
Lilium Femme Argentina Paperboard (plastic-coated)
Pee-Zee Canada Plastic (rigid)
Pibella Switzerland Plastic (rigid)
Pipi Pappe Germany Paperboard (non-coated)
P-Mate Netherlands Paperboard (plastic-coated)
pStyle US Plastic (rigid)
SheWee UK Plastic (rigid)
Urinelle France Paperboard (plastic-coated)
WhizBiz Australia Silicone (flexible)
Whiz Freedom UK Plastic (rigid)

History

It is possible for a woman to aim her urine from a standing position without using a device.[citation needed] This was the norm in much earlier times, and standing to urinate was commonplace in certain cultures and situations.[3] This practice is no longer the norm in Western society. Changes to women's clothing in the twentieth century made the use of urination aids practical for women who wanted to urinate while standing.

Disposable female urination devices were patented as far back as 1922. The "Sanitary Protector" filed for in August 1918 by Edyth Lacy, specifies a "cheap device ...[to be] used but once, being especially suitable as a sanitary device in public toilet rooms."[4] She notes that it is "accordingly unnecessary for the user to sit upon the closet seat; and the urine is led off without danger of soiling the clothes of the user or the closet". It was to be "made of a cheap readily destructible material, such as stiff paper, which can be readily disposed of after its use".

A similar device was patented in 1956: "an efficient urine conductor for use by females eliminating all need for contacting a toilet facility...usable while in a comfortable, erect standing position".[5] Another half a dozen devices with the same basic purpose and form were patented by the end of the century.[6]

The Urinelle,[7] which originates from France, appeared in 1996 and was the first to have mainstream manufacturing.

See also

References

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Carol Olmert. Bathrooms Make me Nervous. 2008. p.121
  4. US Patent 1407872 Sanitary Protector (February 1922)
  5. US Patent 2878486 Sanitary device (January 1956)
  6. For example:
  7. Urinelle - the urination funnel for women