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13 answers

my son was around 6 before he was completely clean.. 4 is ok.. you might buy him a cute superman/spiderman night light and a cute kids alarm clock and set it for 2am. allow him to get up and pee in the night by himself.. reward his "'bigboy" behavior. .. the other poster is right about not giving drinks 2 hours before bedtime. ..also I had my son wash his own mess when he was older. After a few times of this, he got tired real quick of that and stopped.

2006-11-16 05:33:15 · answer #1 · answered by Mintee 7 · 0 0

I have a 5 year old bed wetter!!! The doctor told me not to give him anything to drink after 6-7:00 pm. He also suggested waking him up in the middle of the night, and taking him to the bathroom. Me? I'm not disciplined enough for either, so my 5 year old pisses away!

On the other hand, I have a 3 year old that doesn't pee in the bed no matter what! I guess it depends on the child. If you use the above tactics, then he won't wet the bed. I know 10 year olds that still pee in the bed!

Good luck!

2006-11-16 05:29:52 · answer #2 · answered by O.K.Q.T. 3 · 0 0

All the tips you've received are great so far. I am a foster parent and currenlty have a 4 and and 8 year old girl and an 8 year old boy who are all bedwetters! Yikes! (Did I mention I love pull-ups and waterproof mattress protectors!) I've had much success with the girls in limiting drinks 2-3 hours before bed, making SURE they go to the bathroom before bed, and what I find is they get lazy and don't want to get up in the morning and go to the bathroom so they pee in their pull-ups. So, I make sure and hustle them off to the bathroom. The boy, on the other hand, has many psychological problems, and I've not had much success with him. I have had kids (boys and girls) before that are on medication for wetting beds. My experience is that if there aren't medical/emotional issues than you can get it curbed. I've done wall charts etc. and have had good experience with rewards for dry days.

2006-11-16 06:14:52 · answer #3 · answered by lucee03 2 · 0 0

Four is not way out of line. some children just take a bit longer, give the child time and see what happens. If this keeps up after 7 or 8 you should talk to your doctor about it.

2006-11-16 05:28:47 · answer #4 · answered by Squall 2 · 0 0

Pull-ups. My five year old still wears them. She simply doesn't wake up at night when she pees. I have found her soundly sleeping in a pool of urine before I went back to the pull-ups. The doctors say not to worry about a problem until they are six. I am expecting her "sensors" to mature sometime during this year.

2006-11-16 09:11:35 · answer #5 · answered by toomanycommercials 5 · 0 0

Nothing to drink 2 hours before bed.

2006-11-16 05:32:43 · answer #6 · answered by egg_sammash 5 · 0 0

Don't let them have anything to drink a few hours before bed. That seems to help my 3 yr old. Good Luck!!

2006-11-16 05:28:05 · answer #7 · answered by COURTNEY 3 · 0 0

you may want to favor to make sure what's causing the youngster to be wetting the mattress. many cases at that age even although the youngster is "potty experienced" their bladder remains not as mature and motives complications like mattress wetting. also at that age if there has been significant adjustments contained in the childs common i.e. a huge flow, replace in college or daycare it may lead them to be lower than pressure and that is one ingredient they could regulate. If there have been no significant adjustments contained in the childs existence, attempt to make confident the youngster is going pee formerly mattress, have them stop ingesting drinks some hours formerly they flow to sleep. Definately stay remote from the caffeine or juices overdue contained in the nighttime.

2016-11-29 04:57:04 · answer #8 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Do not give him any thing to drink a few hours before bed. I would tell them they could have a big girls or boys bed if they stop wetting the bed. You need to encourage them.

2006-11-16 05:32:41 · answer #9 · answered by red1967 4 · 0 0

No drinks 2 hours before bedtime. Make sure your child goes to the bathroom before they go to bed.

2006-11-16 05:30:57 · answer #10 · answered by Lisa 4 · 0 0

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