The history, evolution and treatment of urinary incontinence have relevant nuances, such as the establishment of world urinary incontinence day, among others. Large studies show the psychological condition of the women who suffer from it, the high state and personal economic expenses, the medical ignorance of the importance of this pathology, even reaching the environmental topic of contamination due to the exponential increase in the consumption of diapers. This article shows that the SYCFIM hysterectomy surgical technique achieves the curative treatment of patients with stress, urgency, and mixed urinary incontinence, on the basis that the surgical technique achieves the anatomical restoration of the urethral vesicle in its original position, achieving with this, the most important causes of these incontinences disappear. It was evidenced in this study that in the early postoperative control of the SYCFIM technique it achieved the disappearance of urinary incontinence in all patients, it was also observed that after a few years some patients reported the reappearance of incontinence in patients who stopped exercising Kegel, and in the patients who resumed Kegel exercise, incontinence disappeared again, establishing that this exercise is relevant in the treatment of urinary incontinence. A small group of patients who could not or did not want to do the Kegel exercise were provided with electrostimulation equipment that is used in physiatry, achieving a positive response to the disappearance of incontinence in all these patients. And an even smaller group of patients who presented stress incontinence and if they did the Kegel exercise (confirming their tonicity by vaginal touch), the SYCFIM exercise was established (which is Kegel, only that it is performed prior to events that generate increased abdominal pressure, that is, before sneezing or before coughing, sustained Kegel must be performed, thus avoiding urine leakage), also achieved the disappearance of incontinence with this management. The evaluations of the type of incontinence that the patient presents, the postoperative evolution of the presence or absence of incontinence, and its management with the Kegel exercise were carried out by a professional psychologist. The excellent results obtained with the SYCFIM technique for stress, urge and mixed incontinence, force the urology and gynecology guild to review the traditional technique, which could even be classified as iatrogenic, since it increases two and a half times the incidence of urinary incontinence.