ARTICLES / General / Getting
to the Bottom of Bed-Wetting /
Other Articles
Share This Article
Getting to the Bottom of Bed-Wetting
Consistently wetting the bed--beyond
the age deemed reasonable by society--can be a traumatic
experience for a child who doesn’t understand why. Did
you know that most children who experience enuresis (the
clinical term for bed-wetting) have at least one parent
who had the same problem? A parent could de-stress the
child, and maybe the situation, by confiding that in
their child. Enuresis affects 20% of children at five years old, five
percent at age ten, and two percent at 15. One out of
100 children with enuresis may continue wetting the bed
into adulthood. It is over twice as common in boys as it
is in girls. While it is common for children five and
under to occasionally wet the bed, the child who has
repeated episodes at six or beyond should be taken to a
professional. Enuresis does not necessarily mean that a child has
emotional or physical problems. Sometimes the cause is
as simple as having a delay in the development of the
bladder. The smaller bladder cannot possibly hold a
large amount of urine. Some researchers believe that it
could be related to toilet training. The training was
either too early or too strongly enforced. It could also
be caused by an adjustment problem, parents who are too
critical, a reaction to a new situation—perhaps a new
sibling in the house—or a regression of some kind. Physical factors other than the slow development of the
bladder are rare, but may include lesions in the lower
spinal cord, diabetes, or urinary tract infection. A
physical and a urinalysis could rule out physical causes
and infection or diabetes.
Printable Version
|