Bedwetting is quite common in school-age children: they can’t control it, and most grow out of it. In the meantime, there are things you can do to help your child feel better about this issue.
About 20% of five-year-olds wet the bed; by the age of 10, about 5% do it. Only 1% of 15-year-olds are still wetting at night.
Bedwetting is nobody’s fault – it isn’t caused by laziness or done to get attention. Chlidren who do it just don't have the necessary control, and don’t wake up when their bladders are full.
Many children who wet the bed seem to sleep more heavily and be harder to wake than other children. This means they’re not able to wake themselves when they have a full bladder.
There can be medical causes, so it's a good idea to have a check by your doctor. A lot of children who wet the bed produce more urine at night than others, because of a low level of a hormone that controls how much urine is made while they’re sleeping. Others have bladders that just can’t hold a lot.
Bedwetting often runs in the family – you might find that dad, mum, an uncle or aunt used to wet the bed, and might still have to get up at night to go to the toilet.
Sometimes children who wet the bed stay dry when sleeping in a strange place. This might be because they’re worried about sleeping in the strange place, so they sleep more lightly. When they’re at home and relaxed again, they often go back to wetting the bed.
Some children who have been dry might start wetting the bed again if something happens to make them very stressed – for example, a family break-up or starting school, or if they’re not well. In this case, the bedwetting will usually stop when the child feels more secure.
Children often worry about wetting the bed at school camps or at sleepovers, and might try to avoid going. Children should be encouraged not to miss out on these fun times.
If your child is very anxious about camp or sleepovers, there’s a hormone medication (which is sprayed into the nose) that can decrease the amount of urine produced at night. See your doctor a couple of weeks before the camp or sleepover to see whether this might help your child.
Remember that teachers are used to dealing with these situations without embarrassing the child. Have a private discussion with your child’s teacher about how the bedwetting can be managed, then talk with your child about what to do if it happens at camp.
If your child is going on a sleepover in someone else’s home, discuss with the parent how to best manage the bedwetting. Let your child know they can talk to the adult of the house privately if they have an accident.
Night time ‘pull-ups’ might help. There are also ‘nappies’ for older/bigger children.
Don’t punish, criticise or tease your child, and don’t let others do this to her. This can make her tense and anxious and make the problem worse.
It’s not a good idea to make young children clean up after themselves, as they might see it as a punishment for something they have no control over. Children often feel sad when they wake up in a wet bed, and the last thing they want to do is upset you.
Keep in mind that behaviour change programs, such as star charts, won’t work because your child can’t control the bedwetting.
G.B. Marshall, J. Trinder, J.C. Bornstein (2009). Treatment of Bedwetting (nocturnal enuresis) in Australia and New Zealand with the bell-and-pad apparatus. Autonomic Neuroscience, 149(1-2), 12 August 2009, pp123-124.
Glazener, C.M.A., & Evans, J.H.C. (2006). Desmopressin for nocturnal enuresis in children. In The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. Issue 2. The Cochrane Collaboration. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Glazener, CM, Evans, JH. (2004). Simple behavioural and physical interventions for nocturnal enuresis in children. The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. The Cochrane Collaboration. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Glazener, CM, Evans, JH, Peto, RE (2005). Alarm interventions for nocturnal enuresis in children. The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. The Cochrane Collaboration. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Moulden, A. (n.d.). Primary nocturnal enuresis. Melbourne: Royal Children's Hospital.
National Kidney Foundation (n.d.). When Bedwetting Becomes A Problem. Retrieved 10 March 2006 from http://www.kidney.org/atoz/pdf/bedwetting.pdf.
Oberklaid, F., & Efron, D. (2002). Controlling the alarm on enuresis. Australian Doctor, 8 March, 45.
Rushton, H. (1997). Pediatric urology. Pediatric Clinics of North America,44(5), 1065-1343.