Bedwetting Must Knows

Author: Shannon Miller

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Bedwetting is an issue that many parents deal with. 

Why does bedwetting happen in the first place and what can we, as parents, do to help?

Bedwetting is caused by:

  • The small size of the child’s bladder
  • Too much urine may be produced overnight for the bladder to hold
  • Sleeping too deeply
  • Infection or nerve disease
  • It may run in the family – if both parents were bedwetters, the child is likely to have the same issue
  • Emotional stress like losing a loved one, problems at school, new sibling, training too early

As you can see, none of these reasons pertain to behavioral issues.  This is because bedwetting is a physical problem, not a behavioral one.  So, punishing your child for wetting the bed will not get you anywhere.

Check out some effective ways of dealing with bedwetting…

  • No drinks before bedtime
  • Limit the intake of drinks that speed up urine production – caffeinated drinks like colas or teas
  • 1 drink with dinner – tell your child: “This will be your last drink before bed.”
  • Use bathroom before bed

If your child is feeling bad about wetting the bed, be supportive and praise him/her for nights that your child stays dry.  Most children grow out of bedwetting – many wet the bed until they are 5 years old.  Be patient – those Spiderman sheets have lots of dry nights ahead of them!

Source: “What I need to know about My Child’s Bedwetting.”  National Kidney and Urologic Diseases Information Clearinghouse.

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