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  2. Nocturnal enuresis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nocturnal_enuresis

    In the United States, about 25% of enuretic children are punished for wetting the bed. [18] In Hong Kong, 57% of enuretic children are punished for wetting. [19] Parents with only a grade-school level education punish bedwetting children at twice the rate of high-school- and college-educated parents. [18]

  3. Bedwetting alarm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bedwetting_alarm

    The enuresis alarm methodology originated from French and German physicians in the first decade of the 20th century. Meinhard von Pfaundler, a German pediatrician made the discovery accidentally, with the original intention to create an alarm device that would notify nursing staff when a child had bed wetting and needed to be changed, showing the device to have a significant therapeutic ...

  4. Enuresis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enuresis

    Lifting – carrying the child, who is still asleep, away from the bed to an appropriate place to urinate; Waking a child up at night is not a medically supported long-term cure or solution for nocturnal enuresis, and may just be a one-time solution even if it appears to resolve enuresis. [5]

  5. Does a Bed-Wetting Alarm Even Work? We Asked a Pediatric ...

    www.aol.com/news/does-bed-wetting-alarm-even...

    Parents of kids who are having nighttime accidents may seek a technological solution in the form of a bed-wetting alarm. These devices clip onto kids’ underwear (or may even be special underwear ...

  6. Waking up to soiled sheets again? Why bedwetting is ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/waking-soiled-sheets-again...

    Experts weigh in on the best way to get a drier night’s sleep. Waking up to soiled sheets again? Why bedwetting is common for some kids — and how parents can help.

  7. Urinary incontinence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urinary_incontinence

    [2] [3] The term enuresis is often used to refer to urinary incontinence primarily in children, such as nocturnal enuresis (bed wetting). [4] UI is an example of a stigmatized medical condition, which creates barriers to successful management and makes the problem worse. [5]

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