4 Year Old Suddenly Wetting Her Pants All the Time...

Updated on December 03, 2011
A.C. asks from Morehead, KY
6 answers

My daughter will be 4 in two months. She has been completely potty trained with hardly any accidents (maybe 1 or 2 a month) for the last 6 months. About 3 weeks ago she started wetting her pants multiple times a day. It started the day I bought her a new pack of underwear, and so I was thinking that maybe in her mind she was just trying to find an excuse to get to wear all her new undies....but it has continued and I am starting to get frustrated. We do not have any new stress in our lives. She gets quite a bit of 1-1 attention from me during the day as it is just me and her at home while the other kids are at school. Her grandma bought her a pillow pet as a "reward" if she didn't wet while she was at her house last weekend, but by the next day she was wetting again and we took it away. We have had quite a few talks with her and she will say, "I understand!" and then go pee her pants 3 minutes later! I can't figure out why she is doing this, or how to help her stop. Any ideas??

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H.W.

answers from Portland on

When I had this problem with kids this age (when I nannied and taught preschool), there were two techniques I used, depending on the child:

1. Tell them "It's time to go to the bathroom" every 1.5 hours or so. Not "do you have to go?" but "It is TIME to go". Help the child transition away from what they're doing for a few minutes, reassure them that they can come back to their play, and that it IS TIME to go.

2. For older kids, who are especially digging their heels in and arguing about using the bathroom, I just try to be matter of fact about it, but I *do* let them wet their pants. That's the natural consequence for 'not going', right? This removes the element of power struggle; if they wet, they have to clean it up and change themselves, more or less without my help. (I do clean up after them to make sure floors are clean, but at 5 and six, there should be no reason that this is MY problem to deal with because they are being obstinate or don't want to stop playing.)

In both situations, when kids wet, I have them go into the bathroom, put a towel on the stool so they have a place to sit, and give them a plastic bag to put their wet clothes in. Once the wet clothes are off, I make sure (with very little chatting) to help them get the pee off their skin with a washcloth (or, with my own son, a quick clean-off in the tub). Then, they are left to dress themselves.

Some ways parents sabotage themselves:
1. Rewarding/punishing using the potty/wetting. This places far more importance on this than need be, in my opinion. The 'reward' is staying dry; the consequence is being wet and having to change. No need to complicate it.

2. Our talking a lot about it. Whether we believe it or not, our talking and conversations about it only encourage wetting, because we are in fact rewarding their wetting with LOTS of attention. Positive or negative, if kids find a way to get our attention, chances are they will repeat it.

My advice would be to give her back the pillow pet and just tell her: from now on, it's your job to stay dry. Then, don't engage with her too much about it other than sending her to the bathroom regularly. (Remember, don't *ask*... this is so important!) When she stops getting lots of talking, attention and concern from you, when you are matter-of-fact about it and don't make a big deal out of it, she will figure it out. Just make sure to stay out of the bathroom when she's changing as much as possible-- don't make it a bonding time.

Good luck!

2 moms found this helpful
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M.B.

answers from Austin on

Also...... you might want to take her to the doctor..... sometimes a urinary tract infection can cause problems. She may not be able to tell you that it hurts to urinate, but she is waiting too long and then has accidents.

1 mom found this helpful
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G.B.

answers from Oklahoma City on

It happens nearly across the board. It is just one of those things where she is growing in a different area and her potty training is gone out the window. She is focused on something else in her brain, this is normal. It will happen again during Kindergarten or first grade too. The brain has a growth spurt as far as knowledge is concerned and the rest just stop for a short time.

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R.R.

answers from Los Angeles on

1) Rule out a UTI by taking her to her doctor,
2) Ask yourself if there is ANYTHING going on in her life that could be stressing her out or causing her anxiety...are you expecting? has she moved to a new bed or room? Have you been talking about her going to school?...
3) If neither 1 or 2 applies go to:
http://www.rogerknapp.com/medical/pottytrainingrefusals.htm and find your "power incentive." This approach worked for us in a day and a half at age 2.5 : )

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D.C.

answers from Pittsburgh on

Two thoughts:
1) is she going #2 regularly? If she's not, that can put pressure on the bladder and cause her to lose control. If this could be it, talk to your dr about an appropriate dose of miralax to help her.
2) is she going through a growth spurt? I've found that growth spurts also cause a lack of control. It's frustrating, but you may need to wait it out (while also going back to frequent reminders).

T.K.

answers from Dallas on

Is anything going on in your life that is differant? Go back to just before this started happening and think about what she could've picked up on. Is there tension in the house, big changes to her schedule or change in care-giver?

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