🚨 Wake Up Dry, Win Every Night!
The 3 Blue Bedwetting Enuresis Alarm combines six customizable alarm tones with strong vibration alerts in a compact, lightweight design powered by 2 AAA batteries. Featuring a patented, easy-to-clean sensor and a two-step shut off to prevent accidental resets, it’s a proven, effective solution for boys and girls. Bonus motivational tools like a reward chart and star stickers plus a downloadable guide make this a comprehensive system to help children achieve dry nights confidently.
T**S
LIFECHANGING. It works!!
It WORKS!!!! My son is 9 and has become really self-conscious about his bedwetting. He was really motivated to try this device. The star system really motivates him. He is so proud of himself when he gets a gold star. The vibrating alarm works! It’s not horribly loud but loud enough to wake them. The time it went off it stopped him from soaking himself in pee. Only slightly wet so we only had to change the top sheet and the pad I had underneath. I don’t have to wake my son to go pee every night now and I am getting way more sleep. I highly recommend this device. It is a great invention. It really is better than just getting a random alarm. The idea is to train their brains to wake up when they have to pee. It’s a genius idea for heavy sleepers who haven’t naturally developed the reflex to wake up when they need to potty.
M**S
IT WORKS!!! It was tough. Biggest word of advice? Consistency.
I have been waiting for nearly three months to post this review, so here goes!I ordered two alarms for my boys at the end of July 2015. My youngest boy was 4 and 10 months while my older boy was 6 and 9 months. They had been wearing pull ups for several years when I ordered the alarms with basically no dry evenings. I was so tired of buying and smelling pullups. We used the alarms on the sound AND vibration mode.A few things that I wish I would have known earlier in the process:Be prepared.1. Get one of those plastic fitted bed covers that zipper and encase the bed. Put this on ahead of time and let it air out! They really stink. (Although my boys thought they smelled great!)2. Get several sets of sheets. In the beginning, my boys were wetting through 3 sets of sheets a piece/a night! Make sure each night that the sheets are cleaned, dry, and ready for replacement.3. Have several changes of “jammies.” Same as above, each night they have to be cleaned, dry, and ready for replacement.4. Get lots of laundry detergent!5. A roll of painters tape. (I’ll explain later)6. Baby wipes.7. Batteries (I changed each alarm twice over the past three months).Be consistent.Each night we tried to make sure that we had everything in order before they went to bed. We eliminated the bed time drink. We completely eliminated “pull ups” from the house. I am not sure who the last sentence was more difficult for, me or the kids as this was easier said than done. We didn’t do this in the beginning. I got lazy a few nights (out drinking) and had them use the pull ups. The next few nights I found that any progress we made was lost. I stopped this after a few times. I am a slow leaner ;-).My oldest kid is a deep sleeper. I found that the alarm woke him up and then he just unplugged the cord, turned off the alarm, and went back to sleep! So gross. Either way, to fix this, I bought a roll of painters tape and taped the alarm cord to the alarm. This way it was easier to remove than regular tape and wouldn’t damage the cord. This also gave me enough time to wake up and make sure he got out of bed.When accidents happen (and they will!), I wake up, run into the room, make sure that they wake up, turn off the alarm, and have them go to the bathroom to try to pee. After this lovely experience, I have them put their clothes in the tub, wipe off, get dressed, help me pull their sheets from the bed, and wipe off the bed. They put their sheets in the tub and HELP me redress their bed. They can’t make their bed themselves so I do a majority of it while they get their sheets and hold a corner or something. This can take a considerable amount of time for each accident and this is probably the most difficult part. Forget that, this IS the most difficult part!If it seems that the kid(s) are not waking up as fast as they were in the beginning, check the batteries. Make sure they stay fresh to keep the alarm loud and vibration strong.Be committed.Make sure you and your kid(s) are completely onboard with this idea. You have to have their “buy in.” Once you start this process, DO NOT GIVE UP! You may find yourself getting up 3 -4 times a night and losing sleep. You might think that there is no way that they can do it. It is going to get worse before it gets better. This sounds difficult but let me tell you, that glimmer of hope that flashes after about a month of this when they only “pee a little” feels incredible! Once they make a night without an “accident,” it is an awesome feeling for both you and your little buddy.Be encouraging.My kids loved the calendar gold star / silver star reward system. We did this every night. Once they start getting consistent, their calendar looked pretty sweet with all those gold stars! I am running out of gold stars! No actual rewards were given out other than the stars. They really enjoyed getting the stickers.We approached this at multiple angles. In addition to the stars, we are dangling a “big prize” when they make an entire month dry (Not 30 days, but an entire month, start to finish. Any accident resets the clock). We do not “punish” them for accidents. The big prize can be whatever you kid wishes / you can actually obtain. Make it realistic and follow though. This is a big deal!In my case, it took about 2 months for my oldest to start making it without any accidents. He is currently on a really good streak. He has been dry since mid-September. I actually thought my youngest was going to be dry first as he was on a streak first. He ended up having a few accidents in between streaks but is dry way more than wet. At this point, he has about one accident every three weeks. WAY better than before.One final note.A friend of ours is trying the alarm now and is using pull ups over underwear. It kinda sounds like a good idea. I am not sure how that is working out yet, but if it works, I will update my review with it. I didn’t do that, so not sure of the effectiveness. I think that them getting soaked, waking up, and going through everything really did it. I think the whole process is tied to classical conditioning (Pavlov’s Dogs).Thanks Wet Stop!
A**N
Want to scare the hell out of your child? Then this is the product for you.
We've been trying to curb bed wetting in my 7 year old, he's still in diapers and enough is enough. We bought Wet-Stop3 based on the reviews, as it seemed like the best product to help transition him from bed wetting to waking up and using the potty. Well, it certainly does wake him up: it vibrates, a small light flashes, and it makes a helluva lot of noise. The problem is getting it to turn off. Want to see a small child having a panic attack at 1:30 in the morning as this alarm just won't shut up? Want to make going to bed each night a traumatic experience? How about preparing yourself for that upcoming sleep-deprivation experiment you always wanted to enroll yourself in? If you've answered yes to the preceding questions, then the Wet-Stop3 alarm is just the thing for you.You would think that turning off a small blue screaming banshee beeper would be easy, right? After all it only has one button (it's the one that flashes). Nope. Press and hold it down steady or frantically push it repeatedly while telling your crying son it's okay... and listen to the sweet sounds of a screaming alarm reinforce the notion that something went wrong years ago when you missed the chance while potty training. Thinking about an off switch? Would be nice, but no dice. I know you're thinking exactly what the general in War Games was thinking when "The WOPR" was threatening nuclear war: just unplug the damn thing. Well, it turns out that your only option: the little sensor is attached to the scream box by a cable, unplug the cable and the damn thing does shut off. Only problem is that even if you clean off the sensor you can't reattach it without resuming nuclear countdown. So either go the rest of the night without, or play Russian roulette in the middle of the night while your wife looks at you angrily and your son looks at you with terror. Have fun.What would be really nice is a product that has some sort of volume control. In our case a simple vibration would suffice. It's not like our son is in a coma. He needs just a nudge to wake up, not a sledge hammer. But, if you like the idea of combining shock therapy reminiscent to the torture scenes in Lost, by all means purchase the Wet-Stop3.
TrustPilot
1 个月前
5天前