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If you are a parent of a bedwetter, you are not alone. Many other parents have been faced with this problem. Children can wet the bed for a number of different reasons.They can have a physical issue, such as a bladder which has not grown at the same rate as their body. Sleep problems can also come into play. If a child sleeps so heavily that they don't wake up to go to the potty, this causes issues. In cases such as this, a bedwetting alarm can prove to be useful.


Regardless of the cause for bedwetting, the end result is always the same -- exhausted parents and kids who are embarrassed because of their condition. Mattress pads can be helpful at times, but you're still left with the underlying bedwetting condition and lots of wet, smelly sheets.

When it comes to bedwetting alarms, there are many different types to choose from but they all work in a similar fashion. They'll wake your son or daughter up when they wet the bed. Eventually, children learn to recognize the sensations leading up to bedwetting and accidents are avoided. By combining training when you are awake and use of the bedwetting alarm when your child is asleep, you can help teach them to wake up before they have had an accident.

While there are many choices available when it comes to bedwetting alarm products, all of them can essentially be split into 1 of 2 categories. Alarms that attach to your child's pajamas, and ones that rely on a mattress pad. All bedwetting alarms work by detecting moisture caused by an accident, and then emitting a sound that is loud enough to wake the child from their deep sleep.

The most sensitive alarms are the type that attach to a child's clothes. However, children may not like having a pad placed in their clothing or a sensor clipped to them and may fight the process. The mattress pad alarms do work to a degree, but they don't detect an accident quickly enough in most cases to prevent them.

If you are having trouble with the last threshold of toilet training, sleeping dry through the night, you should consider a bedwetting alarm. While they're not an immediate solution to a bedwetting problem, they can be an effective way to help children overcome their bedwetting problem over time.


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