Incontinence
Incontinence Supplies for Skilled Nursing, DME, and Home Care Providers
Geriatric Medical supplies incontinence products in wholesale volumes to skilled nursing facilities, DME/HME providers, and home care agencies nationwide. Our catalog covers the full continence care category — briefs, protective underwear, bladder pads and liners, underpads, and the skin care products that go with them — so your team can standardize ordering across one distributor instead of managing multiple vendors.
Whether you're stocking a facility formulary, fulfilling patient orders, or building out a new product line, our team can help you match absorbency levels and packaging to your patient population and order volume.
Incontinence Supply Questions from Providers
What incontinence products does Geriatric Medical carry for skilled nursing and long-term care facilities?
We carry the full range of continence care categories used in post-acute settings: disposable briefs with tabs for heavy or complete incontinence, pull-on protective underwear for light to moderate incontinence, bladder control pads and liners for light leakage, disposable underpads for beds and chairs, and supporting products like skin barrier creams, cleansing wipes, and odor control. Products are available in case and pallet quantities for facility-level ordering.
What's the difference between incontinence briefs, protective underwear, and bladder pads?
Briefs with tabs are designed for heavy or complete urinary/fecal incontinence and for residents or patients who need caregiver assistance with changes — the side tabs allow for easier repositioning. Protective underwear (pull-ons) work like regular underwear and are typically used for light to moderate incontinence in ambulatory or more independent patients. Bladder pads and liners are the lightest option, worn inside regular underwear for occasional or minor leakage. Most facilities stock more than one type to match different resident acuity levels.
How do I choose the right absorbency level for my patients or residents?
Absorbency should be matched to the individual's level of incontinence, mobility, and how often changes realistically happen on your care schedule — not just diagnosis. As a general guide: light absorbency products suit occasional leakage in ambulatory patients, moderate absorbency covers regular daytime use, and heavy/overnight absorbency is intended for extended wear periods or higher-volume incontinence. Our team can help you map absorbency tiers against your resident or patient mix when you're standardizing a formulary.
Do you offer case or bulk pricing on incontinence supplies?
Yes. Incontinence products are available by the case, with volume pricing available for facilities and providers ordering at scale.
Can I order incontinence supplies through EDI or a punchout catalog?
Yes. Geriatric Medical supports EDI ordering and punchout catalog integration for accounts that manage purchasing through their own procurement or EHR/ERP systems, so incontinence supplies can be ordered the same way as the rest of your catalog without manual re-entry.
What skin care products should be paired with incontinence supplies to prevent skin breakdown?
Moisture-associated skin damage (MASD) is one of the most common complications of incontinence care. Pairing wearable protection with a skin barrier cream or ointment, pH-balanced cleansing wipes, and disposable underpads for beds and chairs helps reduce moisture contact with fragile skin between changes.
Are your incontinence products suitable for both male and female patients?
Most briefs, underpads, and pull-on underwear in our catalog are unisex and sized by waist/hip measurement or weight range rather than gender. Gender-specific designs are also available for facilities or providers that prefer them.

