
Explore enuresis, including bedwetting and daytime wetting, caused by deep sleep and an oversensitive bladder, not the child's fault, and seek medical checks to rule out infection or diabetes.
Explore how bedwetting and daytime wetting affect a child’s self-esteem and motivation, and how parent support and training can help resolve enuresis.
Discover six enuresis treatments, including moisture-sensing alarms, sphincter strength training, bladder expansion training for accidents, unconscious habit training, and medications, tailored by age, genetics, and sleep depth.
Motivate children of different ages by using frequent, tailored rewards, praise, and progress tracking with a urine-output and waiting-time graph, emphasizing hope and measurable short-term goals toward dry outcomes.
The video outlines a specific bedwetting program that uses night-time visualization, repetition, and rewards to train children to wake and urinate, plus daytime cleanliness training and progress-based encouragement.
Combine moisture-sensing alarms with unconscious habit training to treat nocturnal enuresis and bedwetting, training children to wake before accidents and gain urinary control.
Guide parents through intensive night time training for bedwetting, including cleanliness training after accidents, alarm wake-up drills, and five accident sessions plus fifteen unconscious habit sessions.
Implement intensive training night by hourly awakenings for four hours, with a large water intake, an alarm, and structured nighttime cleanliness and accident training guided calmly.
I have been treating Enuresis successfully for over 30 years. I will show you exactly what causes it and how to treat it with a behavioral intervention. There are two different types of Enuresis, daytime and nighttime wetting. In this program I will show you how to treat either one or both.
My heart breaks for the kids, and the mothers of the kids who struggle with Enuresis. For most, it is embarrassing and discouraging that they cannot overcome accidents. It usually affects their self-esteem and confidence. They often experience rejection from peers and others who don’t understand that it is usually beyond their control. Parents often are frustrated, discouraged and upset with themselves for not being able to help their child get “potty trained” or believe their child is just lazy. Often kids get so discouraged they “give up” and seem like they don’t care that they are having accidents. The truth is, this is most often a simple physiological and genetic difficulty that can be easily turned around with the right know-how and intervention.
I am giving you the same easy-to-implement treatment program that I have successfully used for over 30 years for a fraction of the cost that it would take to see me professionally.