🚨 Wake up dry, wake up confident!
This 3 Green Bedwetting Enuresis Alarm combines six customizable alarm tones with strong vibration alerts to effectively support children overcoming bedwetting. Its patented, easy-to-clean sensor ensures reliable detection, while the compact, lightweight design powered by 2 AAA batteries offers long-lasting comfort. The two-step shut-off prevents accidental deactivation, and included expert guidance helps parents optimize success.
D**H
Stick with it & it will work!
We were at wits' end. Our son is soon to turn 5 & had accidents every night. He remained in pullups / goodnights and even then we had to use bed protection pads because he went so much that it would leak. He would sleep right through it all. We tried taking away the goodnights & waking him up to go; only to find that he was almost impossible to wake. It wasn't working, so I finally decided to try this alarm. The 1st night, he jumped out of his skin when it went off, but gradually got better. However, a couple of times he woke up just before he pee'd and so that gave me hope. He was peeing 5x a night. After the 1st 10 days, my wife was ready to throw in the towel, but I pushed forward and noticed on the 3rd week that he was starting to wake up earlier and pee fewer times. That week he started to more consistently wake up before peeing, and would come get us for help going potty (he had trouble with the alarm being attached to his underwear at first). This became a habit that we will have to address next. He had one dry night that week, then regressed a bit. The next week, he had one dry night...then 2 in a row...then 3...and went 11 nights dry (waking up once a night on average to go potty--with our assistance) before having an accident and the alarm waking him. He had a couple of accident nights, then started a new run. He is currently at 15 days and in the last week has stayed dry the entire night (not waking once) twice. I have a theory that the device is not only doing Pavlovian conditioning to wake up when the bladder is full, but has a secondary effect to upregulate the hormones that reduce urine production at night. Because he is making much less urine at night now with no other changes to his routine.Some tips:- We use a thin boxer-brief style underwear...this seems to work best with the sensor clip.- We clip the sensor as close to where the urine will start as possible.- We use a lot of praise and encouragement, as well as milestone rewards.- We have used a goodnights over the regular underwear and sensor. This allows the sensor to still do its thing while protecting the bed if there is an accident. It also helps to keep your kid from knocking the clip off at night if they are active sleepers like ours. We are going to start trying without the goodnights, and then try without the alarm once we have a few more nights down solid.- Change the batteries after 2 weeks if the alarm has been going off. We had one night where it didn't go off about 2 weeks in & I think the batteries were getting week.- Talk to your child every night about what happens with the alarm if it goes off; and we have made sure to tell him "if you wake up at night, you need to get up and go to the potty." We remind him of this EVERY NIGHT. Even so, a couple of times I have seen him on the monitor camera sit up awake in bed and not get up. When that happens, I go tell him to get up and go potty--to reinforce the training.- Don't get upset if they have accidents. They can't help it. We explained that the purpose of the alarm was to help him stay dry. He became engaged as soon as he understood that and he *wanted* to stay dry. That is key, I think.- Use the reward chart (star stickers). It's simple, but kids really like to see their progress...especially if rewards are attached.- Most of all, DON'T GIVE UP!
A**R
Works but be Cautious!
This definitely works! My daughter is 6.5 years old. We used this alarm for 60 days and she no longer needs pull ups at night. She sleeps in underwear and hasn't had any accidents. Before this alarm, she had to wear a pull up at night and it was wet 100% of the time. I felt she was being lazy, but his wasn't the case. She slept so hard, she didn't wake up.This alarm will take parental involvement. If you don't want to help your child, this alarm will NOT work for you. Your child can just turn off the alarm and go back to sleep; however, if you monitor your child this will NOT happen. My child had to sleep with me for a month or have a parent sleep in her room. The alarm would wake her up, and at first she would get up and go, but as time went on she would want to turn it off and go back to sleep. This only happened 1 time. It was the first night, we tried to let her sleep without supervision. Sleep by your child and make sure your child gets up for the alarm. Yes, it is inconvenient. Yes, it is a pain. YES, it will work and you will finally be done with diapers.Here is a synopsis of my experience:Once I started the alarm:Days 1 to 7: I put regular underwear on my child. Attached the alarm. Then put a pull up over the regular underwear to catch any accidents. Every single night the alarm went off 1 to 2 times per night. She wet part of the pull up and finished urinating in the toilet. So half on herself, half in toilet.Day 8: Dry night! No accidents. Didn't wake up to go.Day 9: Back to half in toilet, half on herself (but caught by the back up pull up).Day 10 -16: DRY all nightDay 17: Silver Star (Half on self, half on toilet)Day 18-20: DRYDay 21: Slight accidentDay: 22-23 DryDay 24: Half on self, Half in toiletDay 25:27 DRYDay 28, 29: Alarm goes off and she gets up and goes in night (only a few drops in underwear)Day 30 to 60: She only had 2 nights the alarm went off. We stopped using the alarm on day 60 and she's been alarm free for two weeks with no accidents.WARNING: One night she woke up with the cord loosely around her neck. We had been taking the cord which is long and tying it with a bread tie and tucking it inside the pull up to avoid this, but she is such a wild sleeper somehow it still happened. That's when I got rid of the alarm, but she was already trained at that point. Also, the alarm is held on by a magnet, but it was often not attached to her shirt when she woke up. She rolls and moves a lot during her sleep.
Trustpilot
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