You've read all the books, successfully potty trained your toddler and assumed the bed-wetting would end by kindergarten, or even first or second grade. But when the dry nights are few and far between ...
Bed wetting, or enuresis, is fairly common. According to the American Family Physician about five to seven million wet the bed (with boys tending to do it more) — but that doesn’t make it less ...
Got a bed wetter? Sure, it can be frustrating for you and embarrassing for your kid, but it’s actually a common problem with approximately 5 to 7 million children in the U.S who wet the bed at night.
This article is adapted from It’s No Accident: Breakthrough Solutions to Your Child’s Wetting, Constipation, UTIs, and Other Potty Problems, by Steve Hodges with Suzanne Schlosberg. In late 2010, Zoe ...
NEW YORK – Bedwetters don't get drier nights by having their tonsils removed, according to a small study. Unlikely as it sounds, many doctors say the surgery, when used to help kids who have breathing ...
For millions of kids, bed-wetting is a normal part of growing up. According to The Mayo Clinic, bed-wetting affects about one of every four children at age 5, and boys make up two-thirds of this group ...
While the new school year is just around the corner, summer’s not over yet – meaning kids are busy squeaking out the last bits of recreational activities like sleepovers and summer camp. Outings like ...
In 1840, British physician E.W. Duffin wrote to the medical journal the Lancet about his solution for an embarrassing malady. Duffin's patient was a 19-year-old, "unusually good-looking" woman who wet ...
In 1840, British physician E.W. Duffin wrote to the medical journal the Lancet about his solution for an embarrassing malady. Duffin’s patient was a 19-year-old, “unusually good-looking” woman who wet ...
According to Dr. Matthew Ruderman, Ph.D., a licensed clinical psychologist at Providence Saint John’s Child and Family Development Center, there are two types of enuresis. “Primary enuresis is when ...