I really need some expert advice.
My son is seven and still wets the bed.
It is so severe that he has to wear a night time nappy each night and in the morning it is saturated. He’s getting big though and almost doesn’t fit into them. The next size up are hard to come by and are super expensive. I have tried stopping him from drinking water after dinner but that feels cruel. I also tried getting up every two hours and forcing him to use the toilet. That reduced the amount of saturation but didn’t prevent it.
I really need some expert advice.
We asked Dr Jennifer Smith, child psychologist and development expert to help us answer this one.
She writes…
Wetting is upsetting. No mum wants her child to sleep in a damp, cold bed every night.
In my practice as a child and adolescent psychologist, parents say that’s the worst thing about night time wetting, but not the only thing: “I don’t mean to complain. I feel for my son. But, you have no idea how much washing there is! Four, five loads a week’s nothing for us. I know it’s not his fault, but I sometimes feel like I spend my life just washing bed linen.”
Fair enough. Even one load of linen washing a week is a pain for many mums.
If your son’s been wet most nights, for most of his life, his problem is called primary nocturnal enuresis. It’s often caused when children haven’t developed the sensitivity to awaken from a deep sleep in response to a full bladder. And, sometimes, for developmental reasons, it happens because children cannot stop their bladders from contracting during sleep.
And, to push the point that most kids can’t help themselves, the problem is usually inherited from a close relative. I often hear a parent say something like, “Well my brother was only dry at night when he was ten years old.” I seldom hear parents refer to their sisters, because females are less likely to inherit the problem than males.
It might also help you to know that your son’s problem is quite common. That’s why I discuss it in my recently published book on sleep issues in kids; "BUT I’M NOT TIRED!". Up to 15 percent of five year olds, and about 8 percent of eight year olds still wet their beds most nights. But, don’t despair. You might not have to wait too long for a dry night. Most kids mature out of the problem, although at their own rates.