T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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104.1 | | DYNOSR::CHANG | Little dragons' mommy | Mon May 11 1992 16:03 | 13 |
| If he is doing this to get your attention, why not just
ignore it for awhile. Let him clean up his mess and make
him wash his pants. Is he doing this during the day or just
at night? If he is also doing this during the day, make him
wear diapers during the day, let the peer pressure do the trick.
Meanwhile, give him plenty of love. Don't punish him. Let him
knows that you really care of him.
I know this is tough, hang in there.
Wendy
|
104.2 | | RICKS::BARR | Do not disturb! Already disturbed. | Mon May 11 1992 16:40 | 12 |
| You say that this is a foster child that has been living with you for
only a short time? Of course he's wetting his bed and pants. The kid
has probably just gone through some very traumatic times. I don't know
if he's just lost his parents or has just been taken away from them, or
if he's been passed around quite a bit in his few shorts years, but
whatever it is, he's going through some very difficult times right now
and wetting his pants/bed is all probably psycological. I don't think
he's doing it just to get your attention. What ever you do, don't
punish him or yell at him for it and don't treat him like a baby. Give
him lots of love and support and in time, he'll over come it.
Lori B.
|
104.3 | Patience... | ADNERB::MAHON | | Mon May 11 1992 16:44 | 11 |
| I know a woman who's children wet the bed. I guess it's caused from
them missing a certain chemical. It runs in the males on her side.
Her doctor gave her a prescription for a medication (I'll get the name
tonight) and there hasn't been a problem since. Maybe this would work
for the child.
Don't punish him for wetting the bed. Who knows what the other
guardians did when they had him? Poor thing'll go crazy!
Be patient, and make him feel like he's part of the family and not an
outcast.
|
104.4 | DONT PUNISH! | TRACTR::MCCAUGNEY | | Mon May 11 1992 17:50 | 24 |
| I agree with most here - do not punish him! He probably feels bad
enough already! Also, don't make him clean it up by himself - this
will only add to hi humiliation! You said he checked out okay
physically - did the doctor suggest psycological possibilities? I'd
check this route first of all.
Also, if the child has been with you for a while now and has just
started this, is it possible that the child is feeling more at home and
at ease and finally sleeping soundly? The reason I mention this is
that I have a child who slept so soundly she didn't even realize she
had wet until morning came. We went to the doctor and tried all the
usual remedies (i.e. no drinks after dinner, wakin gher up 2 times
during the nite, etc.) The ONLY thing that worked was a product
supplied by Sears - The Bedwetter Alarm! This really works! I would
try that approach! It took less than a week before she was
automatically getting up on her own during the nite! When we woke her
up at nite to try and get her in the habit of getting up on her own she
had no idea what was going on - she was still asleep - didn't remember
getting up during the nite! The alarm is VERY LOUD and goes off when
the pad it's connected to gets wet - this does indeed wkae up the child
(and every other member of the household!).
Good luck - I hope this info helps!
|
104.5 | FOSTER PARENTING IS A WALK ON THE WILDEST SIDE | AIMHI::CONNOR | | Mon May 11 1992 17:56 | 13 |
| We are only his 2nd foster home,he spent 6 months with a
family who had 3 boys of there own and from what I have been
told it was to much for them to handle. He does see his mother
on a regular bases and the previous foster mother never punished
him and treated him like a infant.
This wetting is all new,he's a great little guy who fully understand
what foster parenting is and tells us he knows his mom is sick and
hopes she gets better soon. Don't get me wrong,we don't jump down his
throat for wetting,but when it happens occasionally and it doesn't seem
to phase him a bit for doing it it makes me wonder if we are over
looking something. Thanks for the imput and keep it coming.
JIM
|
104.6 | Love, Love and more Love | SAHQ::TAYLORS | Sheila L. Taylor | Mon May 11 1992 17:57 | 9 |
| I agree with 104.2
He's going thru a very tough time and is probably confused about
being separated from his parents. I don't think punishment or
embarrasment is the answer at this point.
Show him tons of love and be patient.
Sheila
|
104.7 | Long discussion in last version of parenting | TANNAY::BETTELS | Cheryl, Eur. Ext. Res. Prg., DTN 821-4022 | Tue May 12 1992 04:20 | 49 |
| As the mother of the world's all time bed wetting champion (Mark is now 11.5
and still wets every night), I would recommend a number of things.
1. Don't ignore it, heknows he's got a problem. Try to work with him without
being condemning to help him overcome it.
2. If there is nothing physically wrong and he has been dry in the past, then
it is most likely caused by changes in his life. It is difficult to say what
he is hiding inside himself, even if he is outwardly well adjusted.
3. The alarm system is expensive and it doesn't work for every one. It did
not work for my son and I almost had a nervous breakdown trying to use it.
4. The medicine refered to in one of the previous notes is Tofranil. We have
been through this cure twice with success in the beginning but gradually it
became less effective. It is related to drugs used to treat hyperactivity and
must be used with care. It can not be given indefinitely.
5. Do not put diapers on him unless he asks for them. This ruins their fragile
self esteem. My son is now back in adult diapers but because he could no
longer stand waking up soaked every morning and was embarressed on school
field trips. But it was his choice. You can make up the bed with a rubber
sheet on top of the bottom sheet, then a half sheet over it for comfort. Use
no top sheet and a children's washable comforter. This reduces the amount of
laundry you have to do.
6. We NEVER punish Mark for wetting but do insist that he is clean. This is
for his own well being as well as ours. If his sheets are wet, he takes them
to the laundry room so his room doesn't smell. He bathes daily so that he
doesn't smell. He does this voluntarily because he doesn't want his friends
to notice.
7. We have tried every cure known to man. I found these cures had less and less
effect because Markus started to believe that he is uncurable. From my
experience, I wouldn't push the cures. Try and find out what is behind it (and
in your foster child's case, I really believe that this is psychological).
But mostly be there and be helpful.
8. Lastly, and most important, get Ferber's book. It has a very good section on
bedwetting. I have actually written to Dr. Ferber who sent back an interesting
reply. Since we live in Europe, we are unable to avail ourselves of his help
but I would certainly suggest reading his book as a way to understanding the
problem.
Good luck. Having gone through this for so long, I can imagine what your little
boy is suffering. I think I feel it for Markus almost as much as he does for
himself.
Cheryl
|
104.8 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue May 12 1992 09:55 | 5 |
| We're also in a foster parenting situation now. We're dealing with a very
different set of problems, but I think there may be some commonality. We've
been going to family counseling, and although he's still resistant, it has
helped immensely. Bottom line -- it sounds psychological. Don't do anything
that can be construed as punishment, but get some psychological help.
|
104.9 | | CSSE64::BELFORTI | Keep in mind... One Day at a Time | Tue May 12 1992 10:15 | 19 |
| You are ALL going to *blast* me for this suggestion... but:
Have you considered a chiropractor? I am NOT saying this is a 100%
guarantee, but it is worth a try (even Dear Abby has written about it in
her column). Sometimes the nerves that normally trigger the response
for us to know we have to go to the bathroom are not functioning
properly, and a chiropractor can sometimes help this situation.
BUT... as most have already said, Please do not punish him, or make him
feel any worse than he does already. Wearing diapers (unless he REALLY
wants to) is a very degrading thing... I know from personal experience,
as when I have a terrible cold and am coughing all the time, I have to
wear adult diapers because I lose all control of my muscles... and am
constantly wetting my pants (this has started since I had surgery, and
there is nothing that can be done for me, thank goodness it only
happens when I am coughing a lot).
Michael Landon was a bed wetter up into his Jr. high/high school days,
and he turned out OK!
|
104.10 | Our doctor laughed it off | PROXY::HOPKINS | All one race - Human | Tue May 12 1992 11:34 | 8 |
| My son wet the bed until he was 12. His problem was he slept just too
soundly. The doctor told me if he didn't stop by the time he was 16!
then we had a problem. Quite a few members of my family (mostly male)
were bed wetters which the doctor also said was hereditary. We also
tried every "cure" in the book. We even tried a reward system.
Nothing worked. I just had to wait it out.
Marie
|
104.11 | help with diapers for a *big* 6 yr. old | CRONIC::ORTH | | Tue May 12 1992 13:01 | 33 |
| To Marie...
At what age did he finally stop? (Assuming he has)
To Cheryl...
Our eldest son, Josh, is only 6.5 and sleeps more soundly than we could
have ever imagined. He had a babysitter last nite, and she is infamous
(with us only, of course) for not tucking the diaper he wears (at his
request) inside the diaper wrap. We had to get him up because he was
soaked. This entailed getting him out of a top bunk, taking off his
pj's, washing him down and drying him, putting on a dry diaper, putting
on dry pj's, and changing his bed. He remembers absolutely nothing of
all this! His eyes were barely open, and he was like a dead weight
through this all. That's how soundly he sleeps! We do not make a big
deal of it, and it doesn't really bother him yet. May as he gets older,
but we'll deal with it then.
Now... does any one know if you can get really *big* diaper wraps
anywhere?? Josh is 4 ft. 3 inches tall, and weighs about 60 -65 lbs.,
at not quite 7 yrs. old! He does *not* want to go without a diaper, as
he wakes up in the morning sopping wet and freezing cold as a result of
the wetness. He is able to help change his bed, and willingly does so.
But he's *stuffed* into the diaper wraps he now wears, and the velcro
frequently gives way as he moves in his sleep. We could go with the
smallest size of "adult" diapers, but they don't seem to fit him really
well, and he leaks with them (consistently). Any suggestions? Baby
diapers and pull-ups are much too small. He requires 4 cloth diapers
inside the diaper wrap to keep him dry 50% of the time. Any help people
could suggest would be gratefully listened to!
--dave--
|
104.12 | masking tape? | CSLALL::LMURPHY | | Tue May 12 1992 13:07 | 2 |
| I don't know what adult diapers are like...but if they are like the
baby ones....can't you masking tape them to the size you need?
|
104.13 | | RICKS::PATTON | | Tue May 12 1992 13:19 | 13 |
| Dave (.11)
I don't think I've seen diaper-wraps as large as you need them...
but I will check the ads (I have back issues of Mothering magazine,
which has ads for every wrap made anywhere.)
Gee, I was starting to get impatient with my 4.5-year-old for
wetting the bed so often; now I see it's common. I do what Cheryl
suggests: put a rubber sheet over the bedsheet and skip using a
top sheet all together. In summer I will use a cotton half-sheet
over the rubber sheet to keep him cooler. This saves on laundry.
Lucy
|
104.14 | don't blankets need washing then? | CRONIC::ORTH | | Tue May 12 1992 15:40 | 6 |
| Lucy, Cheryl, and anyone else who makes beds that way....
don't the blankets on *top* of the kids get wet?? Seems ours get
wet about 10% of the time, even *with* a top sheet!
--dave--
|
104.15 | Various | TANNAY::BETTELS | Cheryl, Eur. Ext. Res. Prg., DTN 821-4022 | Wed May 13 1992 04:34 | 29 |
| Re. .14 Dave: Yes the blankets get wet too. That is why I don't use blankets
but use a washable cotton comforter (a duvet over here). I have two so one
can be in the wash while the other one is on the bed. This is no longer a
problem since Mark has decided that he doesn't like the hassle and would rather
wear diapers.
Re .11 Dave: Ah yes, the diaper problem. I can only buy one size of adult
diaper over here and they are enormous. We (actually Mark puts it on himself)
just tuck the excess around the back. I would dearly love to find a cheaper
solution. These things cost almost a franc ($.75) a piece. I have tried a
rubber lined panty with a diaper insert but they leak. Most of the rubber pants
are too small (baby size) or two big (adult size). I am considering making my
own since the diaper liners are real cheap. It would have to be something that
fits snugly (like closed with velcro) to stop leaks.
I figure I am lucky to find adult diapers at all. They only just came on the
market. Most adult aids against incontinence expect only minor leakage and
are inappropriate for night use.
Dave, Markus is also a very sound sleeper. When I used the alarm pad,
I would hold this horrible alarm which had woken the whole house with the
dog barking and everything right up to his ear and he wouldn't wake. I would
shake him and get him at least semi conscious to turn it off. Then we would
have to wake him up with cold face cloths, etc. It is important when using this
method to get the child completely awake. This would happen as often as three
times a night. It is worse than a newborn because of the trauma of all the
noise. I was literally a nervous wreck. It had no effect on Markus whatsoever.
By the way Markus, at 11, is a normal size- 150 cm tall and about 38 kg.
|
104.16 | | PHAROS::PATTON | | Wed May 13 1992 13:15 | 16 |
| Dave (.14),
Yes, the blanket does get wet sometimes. I too use a washable
(cotton/poly mix) comforter and/or cotton blanket that can be
washed and dried easily. So a typical day's wash (for Daniel)
consists of rubber sheet, pajamas, and perhaps blanket. Sometimes
he even manages to get the pillow, or his teddy bear! Fortunately
all are washable.
I looked for ads for extra-large diaper covers; didn't find any.
There must have been 15 different makes of covers, most of them
describe their largest size as fitting kids over 30 or 32 lbs.
The largest said "35 lbs +" -- not big enough, I bet. I'll keep
my eyes open.
Lucy
|
104.17 | | YOSMTE::SCARBERRY_CI | | Wed May 13 1992 14:15 | 25 |
| I sure as heck wouldn't punish the boy. If it's attention that you
think he wants, then for pete's sake, what's wrong with that? But, if
that's truly what you think, then I wouldn't make a big deal (negative
or positive) over the bedwetting. This way, the attention he thought
he was going to get (neg. or pos.) backfires.
But, I really don't believe this boy would wet all over himself just to
get your attention.
I remember when my mom remarried and my youngest sister was about 2
years old at the time. My step-dad was very (I mean very) angry at my
little sister for wetting the bed and her pants during the day. So, he
would spank her butt so hard, that I nearly slapped him myself when I
saw him do it. The way I was raised, I was not to question my parents.
I cried for a long time over this.
So, anyway all this ridiculous potty training technique led what I
believe to my sister's fear later. She wet the bed at night until she
was almost 9 years old. Also, sometimes she would sleep with my mom,
when dad was working at night. And then her own bed when he wasn't.
So all the bed swapping wasn't such a great idea neither.
Believe me, she did not intentionally wet the bed. Luckily, my parents
did not punish her or reprimand her at this time. Just washed the
sheets.
|
104.18 | still remembering the embarassment | MR4DEC::SPERA | | Wed May 13 1992 16:26 | 37 |
| I haven't read all the responses and maybe you've already gotten this
but.... I have 2 things to suggest.
My neice at age 7 was wetting the bed. The doctors told my brother
that what was going on was related to sleep stages. That is, she was
partially waking but not fully waking. In the process, her bladder got
the signal to release and did. In her case it was related to adenoids
and snoring.
What I am suggesting is that maybe he is having trouble with sleep phase
transitions and is partially wakening. Making sure that he is not
overtired may help. Is he having bad dreams ?
In my own case, my mother tells me I wet the bed until I had my tonsils
out. What I remember is wetting my pants long after that. (As I
reassured my neice, wetting your pants doesn't mean your going to grow
up to be a freak. I was probably 10 before it was over.) I think what
was happening with me was a combination of a frequent need to urinate
(still have) and a strong desire to not interrupt my play. I don't
think I wet in school but I remember wet pants when I was at play. I
was not rebellious, not stupid, not bad, and not troubled but I
couldn't get my play versus interrupting play priorities straight and
always thought I could hold it longer than I could. It took me a long
time to realize that I had to pay attention to the need to pee feeling.
Then I could change the behavior.
Go easy on him. Put up with the inconvenience. If he were younger you
would consider it part of the territory that comes with parenting.
Tell him that lots of grown ups (he can call me) had the problem when
they were younger and that it won't last forever. Don't let it become
part of the way he identifies himself.
Good luck. I'm sure you want to do what's best for him and it is hard
to have the patience.
I'm sure you are taking close note of when it is happening. Maybe some
scheduled pit stops during the day would help.
|
104.19 | | PAMSIC::POPP | Deep in the Heart... | Wed May 13 1992 18:06 | 21 |
|
I don't have any personal experience in this matter, but I do remember
reading an artical in Parenting magazine about a year ago. The artical
was about a boy around 7 years old that wet the bed nightly. His parents
took him to a specialist that dealt with this kind of thing. What she told
his parents was that his problem was probably due to a small bladder and
week muscles that control wetting. She set up the alarm thing at night
that was triggered when it got wet, but during the day she had him on a
little program that was suppose to strengthen his controlling muscles and
stretch his bladder. Everyday when the boy came home from school he was
allowed to pick a can of soda (any kind he wanted) and he was suppose to
drink the whole thing. Then he was not suppose to go to the bathroom at
first urge. He was suppose to hold it as long as he possably could and then
go to the bathroom. The story had a happy ending. I know that there was
alot more to it than my little description above, but it is still food for
thought. I'll try and see if I still have a copy of the article.
Best of luck to all of you who handle this problem daily...
Lisa
|
104.20 | Some other techniques to consider | DELNI::H_SPENCER | Holly Spencer | Fri Jun 12 1992 14:21 | 34 |
| <<< Note 104.0 by AIMHI::CONNOR >>>
-< 5 1/2 YEAR OLD WETTING THE BED AND PANTS??? >-
We've had various problems along these lines. We initially
had a problem at night. While our son was in the 3-5 year range,
the doctors just advised he would grow out of it. I found that
I was quite overwhelmed with all the extra work it entailed, and
sometimes would yell and storm and take it out on my son. I discovered
that when I would consciously make it ok, the problem would abate.
Also, around 5 years old, I found a massage technique
that stimulates the bladder meridian in acupressure systems.
It runs down both sides of the spine, and then down the outer
front thighs and calves. In the morning, just as my son was
waking up, I would rub his back and run my thumbs down the spine
and legs. That seemed to wake him up enough to get him to the
bathroom on time, and stimulate the nerves. It's hard to tell
if it worked effectively or not, but it certainly didn't hurt to try.
The night-time wetting has stopped.
When I had my second child, day-time wetting began, and
we're still searching for a solution. We've tried some tests and
some medications, and rewards instead of punishment. It seems to
correspond to a play period in the afternoon, and since it has
so little obvious physiological origin, we think it must be stress-
related. We're going to try a different after-school arrangement
next year, and a different camp over the summer.
These experiences may not apply to your situation, and
we're just feeling our way around too. My doctor and my husband
make me wrong about my techniques (but provide precious little
in the way of alternative), and that may be having an effect.
You need to be encouraged to keep trying realistic ways to improve
family life and your child's self-esteem.
|
104.21 | Wetting | SALEM::GILMAN | | Wed Oct 07 1992 12:39 | 25 |
| He is a foster child. That suggests that as earlier notes have
mentioned he is going through some tough adjustment times. The
Dr. already assured you he doesn't have a physicial problem so
that leaves either deep sleep issues (doesn't wake up to pee
because he is too deeply asleep) or emotional issues.
I strongly urge you NOT to punish him. If he IS doing it to get
attention then he certainly is succeeding isn't he?
My son Matt at five still wets the bed.... maybe 1 night in 3.
We make a minimum issue of it. HE decides on any given night
whether to wear diaper pants or not. If he guesses wrong then he
helps to clean things up... no big deal.... just something that
has to be done (clean things up).
If your son is wetting during the day as you indicate he is, that is
under his conscious control. I would ignore it. Yup, let him run
around in wet pants. He will get attention all right... from his
FRIENDS. My bet is that the daytime wetting will will stop fast if you
ignore it and as much as possible let HIM live with the consequences.
The night wetting is not under his control. You might want to try what
we did with Matt, which is outlined above.
Jeff
|
104.22 | Dry All Night! | EOS::ARMSTRONG | | Wed Oct 07 1992 15:55 | 20 |
| Our son Robin is in first grade....he's about 6 2/3.
Until about a month ago, he wet the bed pretty regularly.
Then he was dry for about a week, maybe wet once, and has
been dry since! Its amazing...
We're also of the school "dont make a big deal out of it".
He has 3 younger siblings (our kids are 2, 3, 4, and 6)...and
our youngest was the first to be regularly dry all night...she's
got an amazing bladder, can hold her pee for a long time. About
6 months ago, we started an award system.....3 kids dry at night,
they got some gum (and always shared it with whoever wet). All
4 kids dry all night.....Hot Fudge Sundays! We went 4 months
without any sundays. Then one....maybe about a month later
another one.
Now we're getting an 'all dry night' about once a week...we'll
have to stop the program before too long.
They all get there eventually!
bob
|
104.23 | Don't I wish | TANNAY::BETTELS | Cheryl, DTN 821-4022, Management Systems Research | Fri Oct 09 1992 04:18 | 8 |
| Re. .22
> They all get there eventually!
> bob
Markus is going on 12 and it is still every night :-(
ccb
|
104.24 | | EOS::ARMSTRONG | | Sat Oct 10 1992 11:29 | 7 |
| >Markus is going on 12 and it is still every night :-(
oh....it must be hard to stay cheerful about it.
Do you walk him when you go to bed? I'm surf if I didn't walk
Robin, he'ld still be wet regularly. He's SUCH a sound sleeper.
I envy him that.
bob
|
104.25 | :-) mellow mom | WADD::BETTELS | Cheryl, DTN 821-4022, Management Systems Research | Sat Oct 10 1992 12:16 | 11 |
| If you check through the last version of Parenting you will discover
that Markus and I have been through every tactic known to man and then
some. It's not a big deal. It only gets to you if you let it. He is
so much fun in other ways (and there are also many things about him
that are a MUCH greater trial than bedwetting :-) that I guess I'm not
bothered much anymore. Who know's, one day he might even outgrow it
:-) (Yeh, and I know, water runs uphill :-)
But thank you for your kind thoughts :-)
ccb
|
104.26 | My son Markus | TANNAY::BETTELS | Cheryl, DTN 821-4022, Management Systems Research | Fri Feb 05 1993 07:51 | 26 |
| Well, as you may have seen, I have posted the bedwetter's alarm system for sale.
Markus has decided to, in his words, "get a new life"! He went into his room
three days ago and this morning he showed us the finished product. He had
cleaned out every single cupboard and shelf and everything was neat as a pin.
He filled up one 110 lt garbage bag and took all his little boy toys to the
basement. One thing he doesn't want anymore is the bed wetting alarm which
was in his closet.
Not that his wetting has changed but I think it has to do with a mind set that
is encouraging. I think he WANTS to be adult now and maybe this is what is
needed. A few weeks ago he was dry for almost the entire week. Then I
suggested he try it without a diaper and he flooded the place. Discouraging.
So we had a talk and I said maybe it IS now possible because maybe he is
entering puberty and the changes to his system will make it possible for him.
(He's now 12.5). We talked it over and he decided to take over "his" problem.
So, I don't even ask him anymore. If he runs out of diapers and wants more,
it's his problem to write it on the list.
A few days after this and just before he decide to change his whole life, he
had a real long face and, when pressed, broke down crying, saying he was
"minable" (hopeless) and had so many problems. A few days later, he decides
to "get a life" :-)
I hope his "new life" works, for his sake.
Cheryl
|
104.27 | Any experience with Ditropan ? | ELWOOD::KAPLAN | Larry Kaplan, DTN: 237-6872 | Wed Feb 10 1993 09:36 | 26 |
| At his request, I took 8-year-old Nathan to a pediatric Urologist
yesterday. After a full history/exam, he recommended a medicine called
Ditropan. What he said was that the treatment takes about 2 months,
that there are no side effects which are worth worrying about, and that
it is 80% effective (no relapse).
According to the doctor, the medicine treats the condition by directly
causing the bladder to enlarge.
Nathan is very excited about this, but I'm frankly a little skeptical.
The doctor made it sound too easy.
I wonder if this treatment is so easy, effective, and available (it's
been around for a while), then why isn't it more commonly discussed
(here, for instance). Also, why didn't our regular Pediatrician
recommend it.
(Actually, our regular Pediatrician recommended the specialist only
after repeated nagging and has stated clearly "in no case" would he
recommend drug-treatment of any kind for an 8-year-old with this
condition.
Does anyone have experience with this treatment. I expect Ditropan is
the brand-name. The drug may go under other names as well.
L.
|
104.28 | Nope, never heard of it | TANNAY::BETTELS | Cheryl, DTN 821-4022, Management Systems Research | Wed Feb 10 1993 09:54 | 9 |
| LEt me know if it works. I thought we had tried everything known to man :-)
Markus still laughs over some of the things I tried with him. The hot pepper
seeds are his favorite.
Maybe if Nathan believes it will work, it will.
Sign me hopeless...
Cheryl
|
104.29 | I can relate well to Markus/Nathan... | ELWOOD::KAPLAN | Larry Kaplan, DTN: 237-6872 | Wed Feb 10 1993 12:40 | 6 |
| By the way, I don't want to depress you, Cheryl, but the Urologist said
that the problem is not uncommon even for children in their teens, and
that he's treating a patient now who is 18 (this, he confessed, was
quite rare).
L.-who-stopped-wetting-circa-age-14/15
|
104.30 | Bedwet | SALEM::GILMAN | | Thu Mar 11 1993 14:45 | 30 |
| Matt at 5 1/2 still wets. We have been trying the ignore it approach
except for the required cleaning/laundry. That is, we have not made
a big deal of it or punished him or delibretely made him feel badly
about it.
Help. Last night he wet twice! For a while 4-5 years old he wet
once or twice a week. Now its 4-5 times a week with some nights twice
in the same night. We have restricted fluids after 6 PM made sure he
went right before bedtime etc. Nothing works consistently. My
wife maintains there is nothing wrong and that he simply will outgrow
it if we wait long enough. Maybe she is right.... but I am not
convinced she is.
How much does the Sears Alarm cost? Has it worked for others? Is
it worthy buying and trying? Matt is a deep sleeper, but I do think
the alarm would wake him.
Should we make him do as much of the clean up work as possible, or
have him simply change himself into clean p j's and wash himself off?
I keep hearing that this is a 'sleep disorder' (too deep a sleeper)
and since wetting is out of his conscious control he has NO control
over it whatsoever. To me it implies that unless his sleeping pattern
lightens up as he get older or the alarm wakes him up it is inevitiable
he will continue to wet?
My wife doesn't like drugs so won't even consider the medication which
someone mentioned in an earlier note.
Jeff
|
104.31 | | TANNAY::BETTELS | Cheryl, DTN 821-4022, Management Systems Research | Fri Mar 12 1993 03:15 | 24 |
| Jeff,
I think I've written the book on bedwetters in this conference. Markus is 12
and wets every night. I suggest you read back over some of the rest of this
string and the string in the previous version. Sure they outgrow it. I'm
thinking Markus might when he is 40 or 50 years old :-) We also had periods
where we thought he was stopping but then something would set it off again.
I suggest you read Ferber's book on sleep problems. It has a rather extensive
section on enuresis. I actually wrote to him to see whether he had a colleague
in Geneva and got a nic letter in reply. Unfortunately it's a long way to the
US And I wouldn't consider treating him except in French.
I have tried the alarm. I know it has worked for many people. It didn't work
for us and I think part of the problem is that my husband has problems sleeping
and, since I work full time, I need my sleep too. The alarm usually involves
getting the whole family up several times a night, every night. I was so
stressed out, I turned into a monster. I am selling it now if you want a cheaper
deal than Sears (where I bought it). You'd have to wait until June when my
husband makes his next US trip.
Good luck. This is really trying, especially for the poor kid.
Cheryl
|
104.32 | BED WETTING/GREEDY LITTLE KID? | BRLLNT::PETERS | | Tue Jun 29 1993 14:09 | 28 |
| I looked all the way back to note 100 for a topic on bedwetting, but
couldn't find one, so here goes.
My son who is almost 5 wets the bed most every night. Last night, he
did it twice. And I hate doing laundry! my wife and I have tried
everything including waking him up before we go to bed, and making him
sit on the toilet.
We have tried to show him how to do the laundry, in hopes that we could
make him do the wash if he does wet, but that is to hard to stick with.
My latest brainstorm is to make a chart with stars for each night he
does not wet, then offering him prizes for a weeks worth of stars, but
I know him, and doubt this will work.
Any advice?
Also, I made the mistake of offering him a dollar sometimes to help me
out with things, and I fear he is the most greedy kid in the world.
Now if his mother tells him to pick up, or something, he says that he
will for a dollar, and whines if you say he will do it because he is
responsible for his messes.
How do I offset this little ones greed? Or should I call it ambition?
Thanks
|
104.33 | Mod request | GAVEL::PCLX31::satow | gavel::satow, dtn 223-2584 | Tue Jun 29 1993 16:15 | 6 |
| If you wish to reply to the bedwetting aspects of the previous entry, please
use this note. If you wish to reply to the "greedy kid" aspect, please use
note 188.
Clay Satow
co-mod
|
104.34 | Ignore it | GVA05::BETTELS | Cheryl, DTN 821-4022, Management Systems Research | Wed Jun 30 1993 03:51 | 30 |
| (I will reply to both aspects here but only in so far as it relates to
bedwetting :-)
First of all, divorce the bedwetting from the greed. Bedwetting or
lack of it is nothing to be rewarded for or punished for. If you have
eliminated all problems, there is no unusual stress in his life, there
is no infection, etc. then it is something completely beyond his
control. I am speaking as the mother of a 12 year old who, until
recently, wet every single night.
Rewarding for not wetting doesn't help if he can't control it. Markus
only got frustrated when he saw the lack of stars appearing on his
chart. You can read all the things I tried and Mark tried in this
string of notes and in V3. There are also suggestions as to how to
handle the laundry problem. In the end, Markus voluntarily wore an
adult diaper. Even though he has stopped wetting, he is still wearing
the diaper. I have left it completely in his control as to when he
chooses to leave off the diaper.
I used to have MArkus help clean the bed but in the end felt that was
too much like punishment. Afterall, Dirk doesn't change his bed nor do
i change mine (the cleaning lady does that :-). I did insist that he
keep his body clean and take a shower in the morning. That is a matter
of personal hygene, not punishment.
Take the time to read through all these replies and V3. I am sure you
will get some insight into the problem. Maybe you won't be able to
cure it, but at least you can gain some understanding.
Cheryl
|
104.35 | The alarm device worked for us! | NPSS::WADE | | Wed Dec 29 1993 17:10 | 48 |
|
My son, Jason, was 4 and wetting the bed every night. At his annual checkup my
wife and I stressed our concern regarding his self-esteem and the cleanup
problem during the morning rush. We were pretty sure that he had a problem as
my brother and I were "bed wetters" and there is a strong hereditary influence.
We had heard about tofrinal (inhaler) but didn't want to take what we felt was
a drastic step. Our pediatrician agreed and would not recommend the drug until
he was older and we had tried the alarm. He gave us some information and we
ordered the alarm (I think it was about $50) through the mail. We explained
the process to Jason and after 1-2 week he was on his way to dry mornings.
He'll be 6 in February and he's probably had one wet night in the past 4-6
months.
But, it takes a real commitment for this to succeed. Even with a 6 and a 3 yr
old I'm not accustomed to getting up in the middle of the night but when the
alarm went off both my wife and I got up and and made sure that Jason knew that
both his parents were there and we were trying to help him. When the alarm
triggered the first thing we did was comfort him and unplug the damn alarm then
we got him to the pot and made sure that he finished emptying his bladder.
He'd want to go back to sleep but we brought him to the bathroom so that he
would associate waking up with going to the bathroom and peeing. I remember
carrying him to the bathroom once or twice and standing him in front of the
pot. Once he got to the pot he usually had quite a bit left and he emptied his
bladder. Only on 1 or 2 occasions did he trigger the alarm twice in one night.
We used pullups and attached the wires to the inside so usually the pee was
limited to the pullup (you'd stop quick too if a buzzer was ringing next to
your ear) and we had no sheets or jammies to change. After going to the pot we
had him put underpants on and put him back to bed without the alarm because his
bladder was empty. That was used as an incentive to go to the bathroom and
finish peeing; "if you don't go you'll have to put pullups and the the alarm
back on".
I think we kept using the alarm for about another week of dry nights. Its
great waking up in the morning now and seeing the yellow water in the pot in
the bathroom next to Jason's room knowing that he got up all by himself and
went pee. One of the joys of parenthood!
So, the alarm method worked great for us and I highly recommend it. One thing
that I did was tape a hankerchief over the buzzer to muzzle the sound as it was
REALLY LOUD.
Bill
|
104.36 | Pacific International | PEACHS::DRYE | | Tue Mar 01 1994 12:19 | 31 |
| My son has this problem. He is 9 years old and has all the symptoms of
bedwetters. Very heavy sleep, allergy symptoms, very quick to go to
sleep, attention problems at home and school,etc...
We had a company visit us last night to explain their "cure" process. They
went through a lengthy discussion of the problem and took notes on
Brandon's (my son) personal behavior patterns etc...
Their approach to the problem is to use a alarm device, augmented by a
personal counselor at their remote "help desk" location. I associated
this to the CSC's and remote support offerings from Digital. They have
a very well documented approach to recovery, with case histories and
reference accounts. They tie the problem to a sleep disorder and have
charts showing the normal sleep pattern and the the "wetters" pattern.
The REM state is clearly missing from the wetters pattern, whereas it
occurs 5 times a night on average for normal sleepers. The only time
the wetters come out of deep sleep is for a 15-45 second duration
when wetting the bed. Otherwise, they remain in very deep sleep. They
say the sleep disorder will revert to normal if we cure the wetting
problem. A side benefit is an improvement for the attention deficit
problems and "staying on task" at home/school.
They indicate the average cure rate is 98%, over 3-4 months. They have
a money back gaurantee. The cost is app.1400.00.
The company is Pacific International. Has anyone used or had any
experience with them?
BTW... I think we will first opt for the 50$ buzzer to see if it helps.
Richard Drye
|
104.37 | Suggestion...... | POWDML::MANDILE | my hair smells like hay | Tue Mar 01 1994 13:43 | 5 |
|
The first thing required is an exam by his doctor to make sure
there isn't anything physical causing the bedwetting.....
|
104.38 | | CLOUD9::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Tue Mar 01 1994 14:00 | 39 |
|
I've been told I'm TOO tolerant of this. My oldest son wet the bed
till he was 6, and my middle son just turned 6, and still wears pull
ups. Their pediatrician doesn't see a problem in either case, and
since the only "inconvenience" to me is the cost of the pull ups, it
doesn't particularly bother me. And certainly not $1400.00 worth!
A long time ago, when we were thinking about potty training Jason, the
Dr asked me if we're done with the "food battles" yet. Apparantly
around 2-3 there's a normal developmental stage where they STOP
fighting you about food and what to eat/not eat because Mom/Dad
suggested it. They said that there was no sense even TRYING the potty
training till he got through the food-wars. And they were right. When
he finally agreed that he needed to eat SOMETHING, his toilet training
came right along. During the day.
Now, we've still been in the battle of WHAT to eat, and only just
recently has he begun to try new foods. I distinctly remember this
phase with Chris as well, because it was *SO* unlike him to want to try
anything "new". Now that Jason is trying new foods (And OHMIGAWD he
LIKES them!), he seems to be doing better at night.
Now, maybe it's all hogwash, but it seems to be playing true with my
children. He's not even really aware that it's making a difference,
but I notice that he's drier in the morning, and that he wakes more
easily (in the past, I couldn't wake him for ANYTHING!!). Once he gets
to the point where I can wake him, or the baby wakes him, I'll know
that his sleep patterns have developed well enough to ALLOW him the
consciousness to stop himself before he wets.
I don't know how it all ties in with the food thing, but it seems to.
Obviously my boys aren't 9 years old, and I suppose in a few years if
it was still going on, I'd be more concerned, but after reading other
notes in here, I'm convinced that this is pretty much an individual
thing that will happen (staying dry) when it's ready to happen, and
pretty much not before. Ask Marcus' Mom!
Good Luck!!
|
104.39 | | STAR::AWHITNEY | | Fri Mar 04 1994 13:02 | 11 |
| Has anyone heard of bedwetting being related to milk products? I
read a small clip in a magazine a couple of months ago from a lady
who was having problems with her 6 year old wetting the bed. She
tried everything and happened to come across an article that related
milk products to bed wetting. She immediately took her son off of
all milk products and within a week he had stopped wetting the bed?
It said that her pediatrician, when asked, said that milk products
can make you sleep sounder - hence the accidents?
-/Andrea
|
104.40 | | STAR::AWHITNEY | | Fri Mar 04 1994 13:03 | 7 |
| an addition to my note:
The reason that the milk products supposedly made the child sleep
more soundly had something to do with an allergic reaction?
I'm going to have to find the article...
|
104.41 | Bed Wetting Alarm? | EOS::ARMSTRONG | | Thu Jun 30 1994 08:48 | 14 |
| Several of the previous replies refer to a 'nite time alarm'
for detecting wetness and helping with bed wetting.
if its not too expensive, I'ld like to give it a shot. Robin
is still wetting about 3-4 times a week, and his sister Molly
wets every night.
Yesterday I went to SEars, Toys-R-Us, several discount stores...
none of them carried it. Perhaps I didn't know what to ask for.
does anyone have an old one they want to sell? Can anyone suggest
where I might get one?
thanks
bob
|
104.42 | | ELWOOD::KAPLAN | Larry Kaplan, DTN: 237-6872 | Thu Jun 30 1994 09:20 | 22 |
| From an expert on all-matter re. bed-wetting:
They cost about $50. You buy them at drug stores. Ask a pharmacist at
a Walgreen's CVS, etc.
Do they work ? Sometimes.
We're working a new angle with our 9-year-old. We've had him on a new
medicine for the last month or so. It's a nasal spray that's taken
every night before bedtime. He has gone from wetting every night to
95% dry. The pediatric urologist warned us that stopping the medicine
will likely result in the behavior coming back. He has suggested using
the medicine for 1-2 months until the child is used to being completely
dry. Then the child is "weaned" from it and the alarm is used. He
claims a very high percentage of success with this approach.
We'll start the alarm in August after vacation.
If that works, then, we'll start the same plan with our daughter (also
wet every night).
L.-who-was-wet-until-puberty
|
104.43 | | CLOUD9::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Thu Jun 30 1994 13:15 | 44 |
|
I never tried the alarms, so am no help there, but hopefully can
provide a little moral support.
It seems to be somewhat "hereditary", and more of a sleep issue than
anything else. I have 2 older boys, one's 9 and one's 6. Chris was
wet until he was 6. Jason *JUST* started staying dry last w/end. I
had plenty of people trying to tell me what was wrong with them, and
what I was doing wrong, and that they weren't "trained" right, and I
was just being too lazy to "MAKE" them be dry at night etc etc.
Neither one of my boys ever woke up "dry". If I tried to wake them to
get them to go during the night, it was pretty much IMPOSSIBLE! They
just wouldn't wake up or wouldn't/couldn't go. When Chris was about 5,
I just gave up on the whole thing, and deserted the morning battle of
"wet sheets"/wet clothes, and put him in diapers/pull ups "forever". I
forget exactly what happened with him, but pretty much he decided he
didn't want/need diapers anymore (when he was just about 6), and he's
been dry ever since. Last w/end the had a sleepover at ther karate
school, and Jason was too embarassed to wear his pull-ups, so he
decided to "give it a try", and much to everyone's surprise, he woke up
dry, and MUCH more comfortable, and with the exception of 1 night, he's
been dry ever since. He was 6 in Feb.
I never said/did anything to try to get him to try harder. I firmly
believe that his body was just "ready".
I don't know how the drugs work either, but with both kids, the pedi
was pretty adamant that it's NOT a problem, mostly just an
inconvenience, and as long as there's not a medical problem, it's not
anything that's worth worrying about, or much that can be done. Of
course there's plenty of "friends" who'll disagree with the Dr.
Go with what feels comfortable, but I think that you'll be a lot
happier if you can just try to take the stress out of it and "accept"
that it may be a fact of life for you for a while. Jason was
responsible for his own pull-ups, and anything else that ended up
"wet", he put in the laundry. We just tried to be "matter of fact"
about it, and put him in diapers/pull-ups to prevent the mess, and it
sure helped ME anyway, not have to get upset about the extra laundry
and all that.
Good luck!
|
104.44 | 4 kids | EOS::ARMSTRONG | | Thu Jun 30 1994 14:41 | 27 |
| thanks for the comments/support.
Our 3 older kids are adopted...so i have no 'genetic' data.
the age when they their mom/dad stopped wetting the bed is
certainly one of the things the agencies dont provide.
the youngest 2 kids have been dry for a long time. the two older
ones (6 and 8) wet pretty often. The oldest (boy, Robin) just seems
like a REAL sound sleeper. and Molly has a real small bladder.
We dont put a LOT of pressure on them....they are supposed to strip
their beds if the sheets are wet. Molly started wearing pullups
again about a year ago (her idea). but she'ld love to stay dry
all night. Robin's dry sometimes.
It may be that there is nothing you can do to have an effect on
when they can stay dry all night reliably. I tend to think that
letting Robin and Molly wear diapers for a REAL long time
caused them not to pay a lot of attention to when they had to pee
during the day. Maybe it had nothing to do with it. the younger
2 had a big reason to get out of diapers early.....they didn't want
to be thought of as younger! so when Robin and Molly quit, the younger
2 quit right away. and they started being dry all night right after that.
I think Robin and MOlly will want to give this a try...for their
sake more than ours.
bob
|
104.45 | | CLOUD9::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Tue Jul 05 1994 12:13 | 15 |
| Bob,
There's also "bladder-stretching" exercises that can be done, that may
be a bog help to Molly. Your Dr should have more information on this.
I think the basic idea is you just always try to hold it absolutely as
long as you can, and (in theory) this helps fill, thus stretch, your
bladder more. As I said, my two just won't wake up for anything ....
they never even woke up when they wet the bed, which was a clear sign
to me that they were SOUND asleep. Do either Robin or Molly wake up
when they wet?
I'm anxious to hear how you do with the alarms!!
Good Luck!
Patty
|
104.46 | This typo is too funny! (TP = "bog roll") | USCTR1::WOOLNER | Your dinner is in the supermarket | Tue Jul 05 1994 13:13 | 6 |
| -.1> There's also "bladder-stretching" exercises that can be done, that may
> be a bog help to Molly.
^^^
:-)
Leslie
|
104.47 | | EOS::ARMSTRONG | | Tue Jul 05 1994 16:07 | 11 |
| I'll let you know how they work...we're off for a week at
overnight, family camp and will start when we get back.
We do often try to get MOlly to 'hold it' a little longer
than she wants to.....hard to know if it helps.
I think Robin often wets in the early morning...and I
think its mainly from laziness.....he'll admit that he woke up
having to pee and just didn't feel like getting up. but
sometimes he's wet and sound asleep when I walk him at 11PM.
bob
|
104.48 | 1-800-346-7283 bed wetting monitor | DELNI::WHEELER | Chickens have no bums | Tue Jul 12 1994 18:19 | 8 |
|
To order one of the bed wetting monitors, you can call
1-800-346-7283 -
They run around 50.00.
/Robin
|
104.49 | 4 1/2 year having frequent accidents | AKOFIN::MINISANDRAM | | Mon Jun 05 1995 17:01 | 19 |
| I have a wierd problem. My daughter (4 1/2) has been toilet trained
since she was 2 1/2. I had no problem training her and she has been
religiously using the potty except of late. She has had few accidents
during the night but they are very rare and far apart.
Of late, she has started wetting her pants almost every time she wants
to go. She will be playing (not intensively) or just walking or
reading the book and then she has an accident. This started 2 weeks
back and since then the frequency has increased. She is least bothered
with the wet dress and continues to do what she is doing without even
feeling the urge to change. I have to remind her to go in and change.
There has been no change in the environment or her schedule. Is this
just a phase???? She is not self-conscious about it and when I ask her
why she does it she just says "I don't know". Anyone had experience
with this. What worked???
Thanks for listening....
Jay.
|
104.50 | | CSC32::P_SO | Get those shoes off your head! | Tue Jun 06 1995 09:02 | 26 |
| Jay,
Yes, we went through this with our son when he was between 4 and
5. I think the most important thing to do before you devise a
"cure" for the problem is to determine why it is happening and
I think that for every child it is different. For some children
it is due to inability to 'hold it' til they get to the bathroom,
maybe a urinary tract infection, not knowing when they need to
go or, like my son, laziness. Nathan was just too busy to go
and he, too, was not selfconscious about it.
We tried being gentle with him and saying that he should just
come in the house and change. This was until we realized that
he only wet his pants when he was playing with his friends
and didn't want to stop to go to the bathroom. So, we told
him that if he wet his pants while playing with a certain person
or doing a certain activity, he would not be able to play with
them or do it for the rest of that day and the next day. It
worked. We have not had a problem since.
Of course, there is the rare instance when you are out and can not
find a bathroom. Accidents happen but they are few and far between.
That's our experience.
|
104.51 | | MAIL2::CUFF | | Tue Jun 06 1995 10:21 | 15 |
| We've been through this with my (almost) 5 year old too, drives me
crazy. We have firmly adopted the rule that "after you use the
bathroom, you may.....". No exceptions, no negotiations. Period.
Our daughter flips and is extremely upset when she has an accident,
which is good, I think but seems to be so busy she forgets till
it's too late. Usually too late is at another house where she's
not familiar with the quickest route to the bathroom, which basically
insures an accident.
At this point, using the bathroom first has helped a great deal.
She is so anxious to go do (whatever, play, go to Nana's, etc.)
she is motivated to use the bathroom.
Good luck, I empathize.
|
104.52 | Nothing move her !!! | AKOFIN::MINISANDRAM | | Tue Jun 06 1995 16:48 | 15 |
| I have tried to remind her wherever go to use the bathroom. Even after
asking her to use the potty just before we go out I make sure that she
goes to the potty right after she arrives at the destination - say, for
Spag's (which is 5-10 minute drive for us).
I have tried to tell her firmly, ignore it, remind her, reward her if
she stays dry for a day ... to no avail. Some times I have told her that
she cannot go to the nursery school if she has so many accidents. She
is least bothered about it and keeps on playing, or reading, or
watching TV. There are times when she has to go and I remind her about
it. She goes in the direction of the bathroom but starts playing with
something on the way or with her baby sister.... During this time she
would have pee'ed in her pants. I am at my wits end on this....
- J.
|
104.53 | Something that worked for us. | TLE::MENARD | new kid on the COMMON block | Tue Jun 06 1995 16:58 | 23 |
| First, IMHO, you should get her checked to make sure that there's no
urinary tract infections. I don't know if you've ever suffered from
one of those, but I have, and let's just say that "accidents happen".
Even to those who have been potty trained for years <ahem>.
Years ago I lived with a man who had a then-5 year old daughter, who
also would much rather {play|watch TV|read|whatever} than take the
time out for potty break. So she's just pee where she was. Including
at one of the old DEC outings to Canobie Lake, but that's another story ;-)
So anyway, we told her that if she couldn't pee like a big girl, she'd
have to wear diapers.
I guess this made a pretty big impression, because when we dropped
her back off at home after the weekend, the first thing she told her
mother was that she "was a big girl, and won't need any baby's diapers!"
And, although I'd love to say there were no more accidents, the
frequency certainly lessened to the point that they were real
accidents, and not deliberate.
of course, YMMV.
- Lorri
|
104.54 | Diapers don't work, either... | AKOFIN::MINISANDRAM | | Tue Jun 06 1995 17:48 | 8 |
| I have had her checked for Urinary tract infection. I have also told
her that I might have to put her back on diapers if this continues.
Her reply to it is : Ok, Mommy. Let us go to BJ's to get me some
diapers. Can I wear them now!!!
What do you say to this! She has something to say for anything I say.
J.
|
104.55 | | TLE::C_STOCKS | Cheryl Stocks | Tue Jun 06 1995 20:23 | 16 |
| Rule #1 of discipline - never make a threat you aren't prepared to carry out.
(Now, I won't claim I've never broken this rule, but it is a goal!)
I would consider getting diapers for her (you will probably need to get pullups
or night-weight training pants, to be big enough for her?). It would keep
the "accidents" contained, so there would be less mess to clean up, and
if it's treated matter-of-factly, she may decide it's not so neat to wear
them after all. I dunno. We had very smooth daytime toilet training, so I
can't say for sure what will be successful for you. One of my sons needed
diapers or training pants at night until he was 7, but that was not something
that he had any conscious control over. The daytime thing is obviously a
different situation.
Good luck!
cheryl
|
104.56 | | CSC32::P_SO | Get those shoes off your head! | Wed Jun 07 1995 09:01 | 10 |
|
We tried the reminding to go to the bathroom bit also. It didn't
work. We switched to the 'you WILL go to the bathroom right now'
tactic and it worked much better. He had no choice, no excuses,
no diversions. But, this did not solve the problem of his
laziness. It just solved the problem of wet pants. We did not
know exactly when he had to'go' each time so there were 'accidents'
until he decided to stop. YMMV
Pam
|
104.57 | | CDROM::BLACHEK | | Wed Jun 07 1995 12:12 | 23 |
| Is there something going on in your family that might be affecting her
in this way? A new child, a move, family members fighting?
My daughter had some regression in the last few months. She wanted to
use a bottle when her baby brother did. It lasted a month or so and we
gave her one with water only. She finally stopped asking for one,
right around her 5th birthday, and since we are about to wean the baby
from bottles, she won't even have the visual reminder.
If we had this situation, I would give her a logical consequence to the
accidents, and not be punitive about it. Like make her clean up the
area, get fully changed, and perhaps even load the laundry into the
washing machine. Or tell her that every time she does this she needs
to bathe to clean up. Something that will make the accident more
trouble than it is worth.
Linking the accident to attending nursery school may not be a good
idea, since she will link the two and may use this in the future to
avoid going to school.
Just one Mom's opinion,
judy
|
104.58 | Have your child checked | POWDML::SALMON | | Wed Jun 07 1995 13:48 | 14 |
|
My 5 Year old had this problem last October...She just started wetting
and I was going crazy. For one weekend I was really upset with her
about and couldn't believe she was reverting back to old ways. I
kept telling myself something is wrong - so I had her check. Sure
enough she had a urinary tract infection....then tests...result was
she has Reflux.
I wouldn't wait, I'd have your child checked. My daughter felt no
pain whatsoever to indiate an infection...but she had one.
Just my .02 cents
Denice
|
104.59 | Maybe I'm an ogre but ..... | CLOUD9::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Fri Jun 09 1995 12:28 | 43 |
| J,
Hmmmmmmm ... maybe I'm the big mean mommy, but in reading your reply, I
still see (from your daughter's perspective) no reason WHY she should
use the toilet. Cause and effect, actions and consequences,
temptations and deterrents.
Keep telling yourself that. She pees, mom or mom and her clean it up,
she continues playing. What's the big deal?! You need a deterrent.
The golden rule of parenting
Children will do whatever they're allowed to get away with.
(Actually, this applies to adults as well, but let's keep it simple for
now)
She has no reason to NOT pee her pants. It doesn't physically bother
her, and she doesn't "lose" anything by doing it. I like the noter's
approach, that if their child wet their pants, than they weren't
allowed to play with that thing|person for the rest of the day. Very
real action/consequence.
She's "allowed" to get away with it because there are no consequences
for "ignoring" it. You KNOW that she can go by herself, and have
determined that it's nothing medical or a simple inability. She needs
a REASON why it's more important (to HER!) to continue the trip to the
bathroom, than to stop and play with the baby along the way.
It'll in the long run, also help her learn how to make appropriate
decisions based on the information at hand.
If I don't go to the bathroom, and stop and play, I'll get to play.
Mom might yell, but that's no big deal. (so she pees her pants)
versus
If I don't go the bathroom, I'll pee my pants, and then I won't be able
to play with her at all. )-: ... (might just send her off to the
bathroom quicker).
OF COURSE! every child is different ... but you have to give her a
reason to NOT pee her pants.
Good Luck!
Patty
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104.60 | Good Luck... | MROA::DUPUIS | | Fri Jun 09 1995 13:24 | 9 |
| To find out if she's just being lazy, versus really having a problem,
another approach might be a reward system...start her out with say 20
pennies. Every time she wets her pants she must give back a penny.
at the end of the week if she has say 10 pennies left she gets to pick
something out at the dollar store or get to go to McDonald's or
someother treat that you find appropriate. Each week you can lessen
the amount of pennies she is allowed to lose....
Roberta
|
104.61 | Non cash rewards, probably!!!! | AKOFIN::MINISANDRAM | | Fri Jun 09 1995 16:22 | 17 |
| Thanks for all the good suggestions. My husband does not like me to
threaten her like in - If you pee in your pants then you do not get to
play with whatever you were playing with when you pee'd in your pants.
He feels that those type of threats make her more stubborn like in - So
what, I don't get to play with it today then so be it. I will play
with it tomorrow. Then she starts doing it on purpose. I liked the
non-cash reward system. I noticed that she likes a particular snack
and I told her that if she did not wet her pants for one whole day then
I would make it for her. Guess what!!! That seems to be working. She
has not had any accidents for the past 2 days. Of course, now I need
to know how to keep motivating her.
Thanks everyone. As I had mentioned earlier, I too felt that it must
be something in her system like UTI and got it tested. I had her
tested for everything. I knew that there was nothing physically wrong.
J.
|
104.62 | | MROA::DUPUIS | | Mon Jun 12 1995 09:04 | 4 |
| Non --cash rewards.....skittles, m+m's, a trip to the park, roller
skating, the movies, a video rental....
Roberta
|
104.63 | | NAC::WALTER | | Thu Apr 10 1997 16:51 | 16 |
| I just got back from the doctor's with Paul who is 3 1/2. He trained
at 2 1/2 within a week and only wet twice since then and both times it
was when he was sick in the middle of the night.
For the past five days, Paul has wet his pants each day once. Its a
different times of the day. Each time he acknowledges that he has to
pee but doesn't get to the bathroom or his pants down in time. He is
really embarrassed over this also.
The doctor said his urine showed no signs of infection. I'm not sure
what to think of this. There has been no changes in his lifestyle and
he is a happy child.
Any ideas?
cj
|
104.64 | | SMARTT::JENNISON | And baby makes five | Thu Apr 10 1997 17:21 | 19 |
|
Yes.
Emily went through this last summer.
Basically, she was having too much fun to bother going,
and each accident occured in the bathroom, one step from
the potty.
Without belittling her, I explained that it was her job
to remember to go potty, and if she forgets, I would have
to start taking her to the potty myself so she doesn't forget.
Apparently, that was bothersome enough, because the accidents
stopped immediately.
Emily was a little over 4 when this happened.
|