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Tips for Parents of Boys

  • Set a bedtime routine. Include things like reading or singing songs.
  • Make wise choices in how you spend your evening. Relax and do fun activities that aren’t energizing.
  • Avoid constipation, which can put pressure on the bladder. This is more common in boys, and Dr. Huff encourages parents, and the boys if they are old enough, to monitor bowel movements and make sure they’re normal.
  • Kids with ADHD are more likely to be bed wetters, and boys are more likely to suffer from ADHD. While Dr. Huff cautions that this is not necessarily the first thing you should suspect, if you do see bedwetting in combination with some common characteristics of ADHD, it’s probably worth discussing the issue with your physician.
  • Focus on your child’s achievements in other areas. The more the child thinks he can do, the more confident he’ll be about success in other areas.

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Going to Grandma's: Helping Grandparents Understand Bedwetting
By April E. Clark

"To Grandmother's house we go" has a whole different meaning when a grandchild wets the bed, especially on extended visits during the holidays. And no one knows this more than Debbie Wolfe and her five-year-old son, Cole.

"I started by buying the GoodNites® [Underpants], which I have to say are about the best thing, and I wish they had these when I was younger," says Wolfe, who, along with her husband, also wet the bed as a child. "This was OK, but if Cole stayed with the grandparents and we forgot them, he would have an accident."

According to the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, approximately 15 percent of children wet the bed after age 3, and bedwetting typically stops by puberty. Though bedwetting is so common among children, the situation is sometimes one that grandparents find difficult to understand. They may believe bedwetting is a serious medical problem or that the parents should be doing something more to stop it. But with a little communication, a child's grandparents can lend their help and, most importantly, support.

"Communication between the parents and grandparents is very important," says Amy Goyer, coordinator of the AARP's Grandparent Information Center. "It can help to show the grandparents information or printed material about bedwetting to help them understand. This can be very effective because grandparents tend to respect information from experts."

Goyer says parents of bedwetters often confuse their own parents' sincerity with interference, which can cause unnecessary friction between the two groups. She stresses open conversation and education as avenues to avoid conflict.

"Don't just assume that the grandparents don't understand," she says. "Most likely they are showing so much concern because they love their grandchild. They usually just don't meddle to meddle. Parents (of bedwetters) should take a patient approach to discussing the topic with their parents and exchange information that they all may have learned about bedwetting."

Grandparents often have more free time to research the topic on the Internet or at the library, Goyer notes. She suggests using their willingness to help instead of feeling as if they are trying to take over the situation. "Grandparents can be very helpful," she says. "However, they should know to pass on the information they have found and let go. Allow the parents to take control and handle things."

 

GoodNites® a Good Start

As a former bedwetter, Wolfe understands her son's experience with bedwetting. "I remember the way I would feel when I was going to stay overnight somewhere, fearing that going to sleep was going to be an embarrassment," she says. "I decided that I was going to try anything to help my son stop (wetting)."

At home, Wolfe and her son have devised a successful system that incorporates GoodNites® [Underpants] and nightly wake-ups to prevent accidents. "It got to the point that he actually would get up in the early morning, change his underwear and put a towel on his bed so he didn't have to wake me," she says. "This was a lot to do with him only being 4 at the time, so I finally started getting him up two or more times a night."

This has proved successful for Wolfe. "As long as I do this, he stays dry overnight," she says. "He is getting heavier and harder to carry, but it is worth it to have him tell me in the morning, ‘Mommy, I didn't pee the bed today!' He is so proud to tell me this. He never remembers that I get him up, so I really don't make that an issue. I just let him know how proud I am that he stayed dry the whole night."

 

Home for the Holidays

Wolfe takes special precautions for overnighters at Cole's grandparents' house. "When Cole is staying with my parents, I just make sure to have my mom stop his drinks at about 7 p.m. and then make sure he goes to the bathroom before bed," she says. "I do tell my mom to wake him in the middle of the night to go to the bathroom just to be sure he doesn't have an accident. This has been working so well that there are days we can even skip taking him during his sleep and he is accident-free by the morning."

Success stories like Wolfe's can be difficult to achieve during seasonal travel. To make the situation less stressful for all involved, Goyer suggests pre-visit consultations with grandparents or family to make arrangements.

"First of all, preparation ahead of time is important," she says. "Don't wait until you show up on the grandparents' doorstep to talk about it. Send them some information about bedwetting if they aren't already familiar, and show them that this is the way you are handling it. If you don't talk about it first, then Grandma will be changing the child's bed sheets in the morning and she will most likely become concerned. Always communicate ahead of time and discuss the bedwetting at length before the stay."

Good advice before heading "over the river and through the wood" this holiday season.

 
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