Anonymous wrote:I truly did not mean to offend and you are right that I don't know this issue personally. I have been given similar advice on other issues (e.g. related to feeding) and I was mainly thinking about the enemas being uncomfortable and intrusive. They may be necessary but that doesn't mean they don't have an effect on a child's psychological experience around voiding that might lead to avoidance or shutting down. When my kid was toilet training in fact I was advised by several people to back off when it wasn't progressing and not give it too much attention. In any case, point taken PP, and apologies OP.
FWIW, I wonder OP whether, until your son has more success with the strategies you are trying, using pull-ups or some version of depends for kids (?) would help your child stay dry in his clothes and not get discouraged or ashamed. Perhaps you already do this. This would eliminate a lot of stress over the urgency for a solution for you as well and you cold discontinue when he's successful down the road.
Anonymous wrote:I agree that if you are having toileting problems at age 2 or even 3, it's probably a good idea to just back off for a while and let the child develop more. Regular accidents at age 5, 6, 7, 8 are totally different, and the "don't stress about it" is just not realistic, as I guarantee that all the other children are making fun of the child. Nor is it helpful because, at that point, there is a problem that is not merely developmental, and ignoring it is only going to make it worse.
We did use pull-ups for a while, because the school required it, but I think that is detrimental to overall progress, and the professionals all agreed with me on that. It does not work on resolving the underlying physiological/neurological issues, which are often related to the fecal load, and undermines the establishment of a timed voiding system, which really is the best way to go if your child is able to do that.
I'd love to hear folks suggestions on a good gastroenterologist or urologist to deal with these issues. I'd like a follow-up xray read by someone who knows what they are doing.
Anonymous wrote:Is there any chance that the extreme attention on going poop (I am not judging, just looking for hidden reasons for some of the problems) is causing some of this resistance to peeing and pooping and maybe even sensory confusion about body cues? You son might think that needing to pee is supposed to be feel like needing to poop. Monthly enema sounds really difficult and uncomfortable for a kid and it may be causing him to shut all of toileting out. Magnesium/epsom salt baths are used for constipation so you could try that at times, but overuse could be habit forming I've heard (not sure). Maybe just relaxing on the pooping and not talking about it much might help.
Anonymous wrote:I'd give up (for now) on the sensation thing and just train that every 2-3 hours he needs to go to the bathroom. And it's not acceptable to say he doesn't "need" to go. Sounds like he's in elementary school. You can/should explain that he simply must keep his underpants and clothing dry, he's old enough to do this. And, "Since you don't know when you need to go, we're going to do something new. From now on, at 9am, 12, 3pm, and before leaving a building (to go home, to school, to playground) and when arriving at a building (entering school, house, friend's house) you must go to the bathroom." He will probably urinate most of the time because his bladder is full. And when his underpants are dry all day then he gets a toy that he loves (or a special treat like more time on tv, or whatever really works for him). Eventually, when he's dry more than not, then you can say he gets a chip when he's dry all day, and a certain # of chips get cashed in for special things (5 chips = pizza dinner, 10 chips gets a trip to local playspace, whatever he loves.
Anonymous wrote:Can a regular pediatrician interpret the x-ray results? Would it be useful to take her to a urologist or gastroenterologist?