Urinary incontinence affects up to six million Britons. Botox, better known as a wrinkle-busting injection for the face, stops random bladder muscle contractions that can cause leaks in up to nine in ten cases, and is highly effective at doing so. But it is currently offered to only 100 or so patients every year – in hospital and usually under general anaesthetic. A group of the UK's top specialists say this is just one of a host of therapies patients are missing out on, unnecessarily, because of a dearth of day-care clinics. These recommendations are part of a 56-page document, seen exclusively by The Mail on Sunday, which details the shocking failure of services across the country to treat the millions of Britons who live with the condition. According to the report by the Pelvic Floor Society, a body made up of bladder and bowel specialists, some incontinence sufferers wait a decade for even a diagnosis.