Bedwetting - When to Worry
by Jared Winston
All the parenting handbooks tell you that most children start to stay dry through
the night at about age three. Ask any pediatrician and he'll tell you that about
that time, he suddenly starts hearing questions from worried parents about their
children still wetting the bed at night. According to most pediatricians, though,
it's not unusual for children to wet the bed long past that age. If your child is
still wetting the bed at five, should you be worried? How about at eight? What if
it's only once in a while? Here are some facts to help you decide if you should
worry about your child's bedwetting.
Fact: About 15% of children consistently wet the bed after the age of three.
Three sounds like the magic number, especially if your child is completely potty-trained
during the day. All children develop at different rates, though, and it's not unusual
for a child to still occasionally wet the bed as late as age seven or eight. About
15% of six year olds wet the bed. About 5% of ten year olds still wet the bed.
Fact: Bedwetting tends to run in families.
Chances are that if you or your spouse was a bedwetter, at least one of your children
will be later to develop night-time bladder control. In addition, if your child
is an especially sound sleeper, they may have trouble waking to their body's signals.
Fact: Bedwetting is more common in boys than in girls.
No one is quite sure why, though we do know that girls often reach physical milestones
sooner than boys.
Fact: Even without treatment, even the most persistent bedwetting stops at puberty.
It's very rare that a child continues to wet the bed past puberty, even with no
special treatment or precautions.
Fact: Most bedwetters do NOT have emotional problems.
Or at least... bedwetting is not often caused by emotional problems. Making your
child ashamed of his inability to stay dry at night could cause problems, though.
When SHOULD you worry about bedwetting?
If your child has been dry at night for some time - several months or longer - and
begins wetting the bed regularly again, look for anything upsetting his routine.
A move to a new home, a change of teacher at school, or something that has upset
him may be triggering the bedwetting problems. Don't, however, rule out the possibility
of a physical cause. If your child suddenly starts wetting the bed again, your first
step should be to check for a urinary tract infection - especially in a girl.
If the return to bedwetting is accompanied by a fever, complaints of belly pain
or a change in toileting habits during the day, it's a clear signal to call your
doctor. Chances are very good that the cause is a urinary tract infection that can
be taken care of with a course of antibiotics.
If your child is especially bothered by his bedwetting, offer him all the emotional
support that you can to prevent it from becoming an emotional problem.
Tips for Helping a Child Stay Dry At Night
- 1. Don't make a big deal about bedwetting. Change the sheets without comment, reassure
your child that everyone outgrows it eventually, and tuck him back into bed.
- 2. Do limit drinks after dinner. There's no need to make a big fuss about it. Just
limit drinks in the two hours or so before bedtime.
- 3. Make sure that your child goes potty before bed. It's an easy thing to forget
in the rush of getting everyone tucked in, but simply making a trip to the bathroom
part of the bedtime routine may be enough to eliminate bedwetting.
- 4. Wake your child to use the bathroom at YOUR bedtime. Most children won't even
totally wake up if you do, but by interrupting sleep to make a trip to the bathroom
you can help establish a pattern of waking to use the toilet.
- 5. Make life easy on yourself. While putting your child in diapers for bed is ignominious,
these days there's a wide range of 'nighttime undies' that are far less embarrassing
to wear. You'll resent the whole process a lot less if you don't have to wash bedding
every single day.
- 6. It should go without saying but - don't tease or make fun of the child to shame
them out of it. By the same token, don't allow your other children to make fun of
him for his physical inability to control his bladder at night.
- 7. Most importantly, don't stress over it. The more importance YOU place on your
child's bedwetting, the more likely it is that it will become a source of emotional
turmoil for your child.
- Copyright © Jared Winston, 2006. All Rights Reserved.
About The Author
Learn more about enuresis and more importantly how to control this embarrassing
and uncomfortable condition once and for all at Bedwetting Relief.
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