Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I am having trouble getting my son (3.5 years) dry at night. He has been out of nappies during the day for about 9 months but is nearly always wet at night so we have decided to put him back into pull ups and try again in a week or so (....and give me time to clear all the washing!)


We have done all the usual stuff such as reducing fluid in the evening, waterproof bedding, beds pads, lights on on the way to the bathrroom, lifting at 10pm but nothing seems to work. He did the day time toilet training bit very quickly so were wondering whether we were missing something????


Any ideas much appreciated.


M

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/8348-getting-dry-at-nights-help/
Share on other sites

I had the same problem with my son and it was still going on at 4.5 years. Apparently if the child sleeps very deeply their brain cannot recognize the signal that the bladder is full. 3.5 years is still quite young but if your child is still having problems 1 year from now I would really recommend the DRI Sleeper Alarm (search Dri sleeper), I am the most sceptical person you can imagine but I bought this and followed the instructions to the letter and it worked! I truly believe that had it not been for this alarm I may still be having bedwetting problems with my son now.

I tried everything but the only thing that really works is patience. You have to try a couple of nights with pants but if he wets go back to pull-ups for at least 3 months. Keep repeating this until he has a few dry nights.


Trying lots of different things and having wet beds makes the child stressed (and you). So you need to try one thing, then if it doesn't work give it a long break, then try again.


But don't try lifting becuase your child will not be fully awake so you are just training him to wee in a sleepy state. Even if you try to wake him he still won't be awake enough.


I looked into the alarm but was advised against using it on young children becuase they can just become accustomed to the alarm and sleep through. Like orlakeilyhandbag says wait until he is older and use it as a last resort.

Hi Millie42,


You have my sympathy - our eldest daughter potty trained (daytime) at 2 years old in a day and I assumed she'd be dry at night soon after. In actual fact she went on in night nappies until 3.5 - she was a really heavy sleeper (slept through 12 hours from 10 weeks old) and just didn't wake up at night so no hope of getting dry. Like you we tried everything on and off, but in the end all that worked was giving it time until finally it 'clicked'. When she finally got dry we only had 2 or 3 accidents in the first month or two and after that she's been 100% reliable.


I think you need to go back to night nappies as others have said and try again in a few months. Also, talk to your doctors as I believe you can get the alarm through the NHS once they get to about 4 or 4.5 years old, but may have to go on a waiting list, so worth finding out about it sooner rather than later. I know a couple of the Nappy Lady advisors had boys with similar problems who finally, with the help of the alarm got dry between the age of 4 and 5.


Best wishes, Molly

Thanks everyone. I had no idea that 3.5 was prety young. We will pop his back in night pullups for a while and see how it goes. For about two weeks these were dry each morning so i thought it was time to stop using them but its obviously too early.


Michelle

This is an interesting thread, I didn't realise that 3.5 was considered young to be dry in the night. My little boy (will be 3 in Jan) has been dry in the day since June, and I was starting to worry about how wet/dirty he is in the morning - this means I can relax a bit!


However the last few nights he has been waking at around 3am and asking to use the toilet - a difficult one, as obviously I know it's a good thing and we take him, but part of me wishes he'd just lie there quietly and make use of the nappy! He's still very wet in the morning, so it's not as if his trip to the loo is helping on that front.

  • 4 weeks later...
my little boy is 2.5 and has been completely dry overnight for around 3 weeks now. i put him in pants overnight around 2.5 months ago and dropped his fluids after 6 and it was pretty 50:50 wet and dry for a while. i didnt want to go down the route of going back to nappies again, and pull-ups are designed to hold moisture away from the body so i dont really see the logic (what works for one doesnt always work for another!). after plenty of trial and error iv realised that he was only wetting on the nights that i lifted him at around ten/half past. since not getting him up for a night time wee wee at all, he has been dry. im not sure whether its maybe something to do with his sleep pattern being disturbed or something else, or maybe just pure coincidence, but its been working sofar!!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • With fibre you are paying for the speed, which is the number, yours is 300 so if you did a lot of gaming, for example, you would want the fastest possible.  If it's just office work or maybe streaming on Netflix you likely won't need as fast, but, if there are a lot of people in your house all doing their own thing on different devices, then faster speeds are better.  I don't rely on my Wi-Fi much other than when I am using my mobile.  I use Ethernet cables to connect up everything, I Have one cable running from my router, along the skirtings and through a hole I drilled in the wall to another room.  I have attached the plusnet speed guide which gives you an idea of how it works.   
    • I'd reread what you posted and try to summarise.  It just comes across as a rant.
    • Just shows, to me, once proud to be a citizen of UK.. now.. well if we pay/contribute to services - nhs, police, fire etc and folk who have made this there home - no matter what creed or culture.. for the love c of God, can someone  please explain to me.. how we have working royals who like them or not, have tried and continue to actually support and make a change and then we have Andrew.. who just destroys everything.. not just him, or royalty but his own children..  I had great admiration for The Queen - and respect.. as have a huge number of people.. but.. these old traditions where gosh.. live rent free and can’t get chucked out until I believe 2070? From what I scanned..well he has and continues to have it all.. has to go thru what old rules? Etc.  doubt very much he has even kept the upkeep maintenance up on his abode.. and do the shite keeps on pulling up.. What has Andrew done for UK or for that matter since he was 20?? Do please tell me       Totally off topic, before anyone jumps down my throat.. I just do not get how anyone is proud to be British at this point in time. Whoever is in power, seems to be able to help themselves to the public purse with no redress at all - Covid is a great example of lining of pockets.. Millions  given to Rowanda, so one is led to believe, to help with refugee problem and one can’t get a plane load off!  I simply do not get it at all. Use of food banks in UK growing yearly, homeless as well, nhs, police, fire service etc all on their knees..        
    • Have applied the green roof at a number of properties and no issues you are concerned about detected. Have issues with cats defecating in the vicinity, however, they are not selecting the green roof specifically. Use decent compost, slow release fertiliser specific for green roofs, and lay it methodically not leaving blank patches. It looks amazing when cared for and adds value.  
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...