33 answers

Bed Wetting - Canyon Country, CA

Hi, I am wondering if anyone is having any problems with older kids, age range 5 to 6, who still wet the bed at night. I make sure that they go before bed. I wake them up before I go to bed and make them go again and still they have accidents during the night. They are cut off of drinking after dinner. I end up washing sheets just about every other day and I don't know what is wrong with them. Could it be medical?

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Featured Answers

Hi L.-

We used the alarm on my daughter and it really worked. We had already had her cleared that there wasn't any medical problems and went ahead and got the alarm. The first night, it woke her up and she HATED it. She actually hid the alarm and then didn't have an accident for a couple of nights. Then she started having the accidents again so she "found" the alarm. I think we had two nights of it waking us up and then she hasn't had an accident since.

She also was a thumb sucker and a friend told me that when my daughter is older and gets married, she promises that she will not be walking down the aisle sucking her thumb, wearing pull-ups. That woke me uo to realize that there really are bigger things to worry about!

I, too, am having a terrible time with my 6 year old son wetting the bed. He wears nightime pull-ups and is now starting to pee even through them. I limit his liquids before bed. We've used an alarm. That seemed to be helping, but now the alarm is malfunctioning. I know that it isn't totally uncommon to be wetting the bed at this age, but I'm frustrated because it doesn't seems to be improving. He's a large boy who is a very heavy sleeper.

Hi L.,
My 6 and a half year old still wets at night. I gave up feeling bad about it and every night he wears good nights pull ups. As if one pull up wasn't enough he needs 2 because one was leaking. I make a slit in the front of one that he puts on first then he puts on one over that and I don't have to wash wet sheets hardly ever. I have talked to the doctor before and her only suggestion is the alarm underwear but I don't think that is right for us because I have a baby too and do not want to get woke up if I'm actually sleeping. I'm told he will grow out of it and I can't wait. I also do what you do and limit fluids after dinner, some kids are really heavy sleepers. Good Luck

More Answers

L., Please look up the "potty pager" on line. It was our life saver when we were trying to get our 7 year old to stop wetting the bed. It really works and it's so worth the money. It worked for us in just 3 weeks and our son has not had one accident since.
Good luck. I know this can be a very frustrating thing.
M.

1 mom found this helpful

Dear L.:

This is a really important subject to me. As I said on another post: "I come from a family of bedwetters...embarassing but true! Many of us had this problem until age 6 or 7. (Some until much older!) Here is what worked for me: TONS OF WATER before bed! This way, the bladder fills quickly and the pain wakes you up!

My two children NEVER had a problem with bedwetting (like I said UNIQUE in my family!) and I think it has something to do with the enormous water bottles next to each of their beds!"

Listen to what your other advisors said because a lot of those methods work (the alarm, checking for infection, etc.) but all those things were tried in my family when I was a child and the one thing which worked was what I mentioned! Weird but true! It was not medical in our family; it was just deep sleep.

Best wishes,

M.

Pull ups!!!! My 5yo (almost 6) wears them at night and she pees a lot! I wouldn't dream of having her wear underwear. I just read this weekend in a potty training book (working on my 3yo) that you should not wake a child to go to the bathroom. You are disrupting sleep that they need. It is not uncommon at all for a child to wet at night. I believe age 6-7 is when you should talk to your Dr. to rule out any kidney issues. It is also hereditary, do you know if anyone in your family or their Dad's family that wet the bed? I did until highschool!

For now, I highly recommend you use pull ups, that way your child isn't loosing sleep from waking up wet and you aren't doing laundry everyday.
Best wishes,
M.

I, too, am having a terrible time with my 6 year old son wetting the bed. He wears nightime pull-ups and is now starting to pee even through them. I limit his liquids before bed. We've used an alarm. That seemed to be helping, but now the alarm is malfunctioning. I know that it isn't totally uncommon to be wetting the bed at this age, but I'm frustrated because it doesn't seems to be improving. He's a large boy who is a very heavy sleeper.

Oh my gosh I am totally going through the same thing with my 5 year old boy. I am so glad you asked cause sometimes I wonder if there is something wrong with him too. I have him in pull-ups now & he goes through phases of wanting to try getting up in the night & when it doesnt work out he says he is ready for the pull-ups again. So I pretty much go with his flow (no pun intended) and I dont stress on it like I used too. And I tell him he is fine & it is normal & when he is ready he will start being able to wake up to go. So even though the price of pull-ups can be a burden it is worth having my son feel ok about himself.

Hi L.-

We used the alarm on my daughter and it really worked. We had already had her cleared that there wasn't any medical problems and went ahead and got the alarm. The first night, it woke her up and she HATED it. She actually hid the alarm and then didn't have an accident for a couple of nights. Then she started having the accidents again so she "found" the alarm. I think we had two nights of it waking us up and then she hasn't had an accident since.

She also was a thumb sucker and a friend told me that when my daughter is older and gets married, she promises that she will not be walking down the aisle sucking her thumb, wearing pull-ups. That woke me uo to realize that there really are bigger things to worry about!

H L.,

Some kids sleep so soundly that they don't realize they are needing to pee. It could be medical but probably just a development issue since they are young. I'd put them in pull-ups to sleep so you don't have to wash the sheets every day. It sounds like you aren't blaming them, which is great.

V.

My little 6 year old is having dry nights, but still has occasional accidents. I found a book once that suggested increasing water consumption during the day to help the bladder stretch??? Sometimes that helped to have a dry night.

I suppose it is hereditary, bladders arent large enough to hold during the night. My children were bet wetters, and now my grandson. While other children sleep through the night, and never have an accident.
Someday, he will have a dry night then another...
I have never used the pull ups, he doesnt like them when he has to use on sleepovers. NOw that he is a little older, he doesnt sleepover to avoid having to use a diaper.

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