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Monday, July 30, 2007

Coping with Bedwetting - The Morning Pee Report

By Susan Lewis

Knocking on your parents’ bedroom door to tell them you wet the bed.
Let’s see. That ranks about equal with spring cleaning, studying for a big history test, and getting shots – all in the same day! There are a few things that will make it easier for your little one. One tactic you may not have considered is getting a system for the morning pee report (feel free to rename it!).

It’s a pretty sure bet that your child will feel less embarrassed if there’s a definite time and place to talk to you privately (and calmly). Make sure to set aside some a regular time each morning to be available to your child.

Now, this time shouldn’t be in front of brothers and sisters – which can be a challenge if you’ve got a large brood. It’s crucial that this conversation is done privately. Brothers and sisters are notorious teasers not always known for their compassion or kindness. But even if their only sibling is a sweet 18-year-old sister who would never even think of teasing, your child still doesn’t want to announce:
“I wet the bed. Somebody, please pass the toast,”
while you’re eating breakfast.

One more part of this idea is to have a system in place where your child can check in with you each morning either way – dry or wet. An easy way to do this is to create a chart where the two of you mark wet and dry nights. That way your child doesn’t have to approach you only with bad news about an accident. You could easily add this to your morning routine, and it’ll feel a whole lot less like the dreaded confessional booth. Your morning time together could become a positive time of encouragement and support – transforming a time they’d rather avoid into a positive thing instead.

Children really do take comfort in routines. With a system in place, your child won’t feel like the “I wet the bed” report is a disruption to everyone’s morning ritual.
Along with this routine, you should teach your child how to help with the laundry, when there’s been an accident. Even little kids can strip off wet sheets and take them to the washing machine. They could spray the sheets with some enzyme cleaner, and get out some clean sheets. Of course, they’ll need your help getting the new sheets on the bed (don’t we all?!), but that’ll come along eventually. They can also wash themselves – and need to learn to do this to keep their skin healthy and to begin a practice of good hygiene.

Just like anything else that’s unpleasant or complex, if you can break it down into its parts and make it a standard operating procedure, you can get through it faster than you’d imagine. No better time than the present to build these good habits – taking care of things that are less fun first, being honest, taking personal responsibility for your body. These are characteristics that will serve your child (and you, for that matter!) well in life.

Susan Lewis is the owner of http://www.bedwettinghelpformoms.com – a site aimed at encouraging, supporting, and educating parents of bedwetters. Request your copy of the free report “Got a Bedwetter? Top 10 Mistakes to Avoid.” Ask your bedwetting questions by visitng To Pee Or Not To Pee on wordpress.com.

If you’d like to post this article on your Web site or use them in your newsletter, you have my permission, as long as the copyright and the resource links stay intact. Feel free to contact me at info@bedwettinghelpformoms.com if you have any requests or questions.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Susan_Lewis

Monday, July 9, 2007

Popular Bed Wetting Solutions You Can Use

By Jared Winston

A huge number of children are affected by nocturnal enuresis, or sleep wetting, as it is often called. Although there is no specific treatment for this condition, parents can still find some good bed wetting solutions that work. This sort of problem is most common with children under the age of five – any extreme measures against it are simply not justified. However, sleep wetting is a problem and it may become an annoying issue to deal with, both for parents and for the child. While children under five do not have obvious psychological issues related to this phenomenon, after a certain age they become conscious about it. This is when finding appropriate bed wetting solutions becomes important for the child’s social development.

How to diminish the negative effects of bed-wetting
While this problem is natural for small children, parents can still take a few steps and reduce the negative effects associated to it. Parents can start by investing some time in preventing the problem from taking place. As part of the most commonly used bed wetting solutions, parents can control the levels of liquid their child drinks in the evening and before going to sleep. Diuretic drinks are those that fall in the following categories: caffeine containing, carbonated and acidic. Stopping your child from consuming them at night is an excellent bed wetting solution. It also helps if the parent trains the child to go to the toilet right before going to sleep. It is important that a pattern is developed in this case and the child will learn to urinate at a specific hour in the evening. This method, combined with low liquid quantities consumed in the evening, has some of the best results in reducing bed wetting at night.

Bed wetting solutions - diapers
Although the actual urinating process can’t be stopped, its effects may be reduced if the child wears a diaper. The diaper eliminates all the problems that affect the parents: having to change bed sheets every morning and it also helps the child sleep better and wake up in a dry bed. Older children might be against wearing a diaper, as they feel they are too old for that, so a simple change of term – from “diaper” to “night protection” is preferable. As an extra protection method, parents should also have protective plastic sheets because diapers are not 100% leak absorbents.

The radical approach to bed wetting – medications
Using medication to reduce nigh time urination is one of the most radical bed wetting solutions and, in most cases, the most effective as well. Treatments with medication such as anticholinergics, desmopressin or imipramine are often used to solve bed wetting problems. While such drugs have high success rates, parents should also remember that they are chemical and hormonal substances, and long-term usage may lead to unwanted side effects. As far as bed wetting medication is concerned, the opinions are varied, many parents trying to avoid this solution at all costs and teach the child to deal with the problem on their own.

Copyright © Jared Winston, 2006. All Rights Reserved.
Learn more about nocturnal enuresis and more importantly how to control this embarrassing and uncomfortable condition once and for all at Bedwetting Relief.com. http://www.bedwettingrelief.com
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Jared_Winston

Monday, July 2, 2007

When Your Baby Doesn't Outgrow Bed-Wetting

By Kelly Kane

Bed wetting may not seem as serious as juvenile diabetes or a heart defect. But to Sam's family, the sleep disorder that caused his enuresis proved almost as dangerous as any life threatening-disease.

The pediatrician said Sam would outgrow his bed wetting. But at six years old, Sam was still waking up in the morning with wet sheets and a profound humiliation that even his loving parents could not displace. Forget about the inconvenience and extra laundry. That was nothing compared to Sam’s diminishing self-esteem and his parents’ guilt about “letting him down.” Shouldn’t they as adults be able to solve this seemingly simple problem? Why wasn’t their love enough? Then one night, they realized that their inability to solve his bed-wetting was putting Sam in the gravest of physical danger.

On a trip to Colorado, the family stayed in a second story motel room. In the middle of the night, Sam was found outside on the balcony. Alone. Like so many other nights he had wet the bed. But this time, he was more than a bedwetter. He was a sleepwalker. Terrified about what could have happened, his parents decided that the ineffective “bedwetting treatments,” drugs, psychiatrists and waiting for Sam to outgrow bedwetting—were just not good enough!

They wanted to believe the doctor who assured them that Sam would outgrow enuresis. But what if he got hurt in the meantime? As the bed-wetting (and now sleepwalking) continued, Sam withdrew into himself at school and became more and more detached from his loving family. He was inconsolable.

Conducting one desperate Internet search after another, Sam’s parents finally found the Enuresis Treatment Center (www.nobedwetting.com). They “met” with Barbara Moore -- the center’s director. By phone, Barbara helped the family understand that Sam’s problem was a sleep disorder, not about his bladder or anything they were doing wrong. Treatment began immediately. Sam’s personal counselor – Maryanne – set up appointments through email and phone calls and worked with the family every step of the way, bringing hope and results into their lives. Because they know at the Enuresis Treatment Center that each bedwetter is unique, a tailored program was developed just for Sam. It included bio-feedback and NO medication. Together with counseling, this protocol ended his vicious cycle of bedwetting and sleepwalking. In three months, both bedwetting and sleepwalking significantly decreased. In five months, Sam was no longer a bedwetter. He uttered three words his parents longed to hear: “I feel normal.” Now Sam has the potential to experience all the happiness and success his parents have wished for him.

Thanks to the Enuresis Treatment Center www.nobedwetting.com
To stop bedwetting for someone you love contact www.nobedwetting.com
From the US, call 1-800-379-2331.
Outside the US, call 1-248-785-1199
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Kelly_Kane