Things
You Can Do
Tips to Help Your Child Learn
to Use the Toilet
• Get a children’s book about learning to
use the toilet and read it together.
• Decide what words you’ll use for your
child’s body parts, urine and stool. It’s
best to use the correct terms, like “urine,”
or common terms, like “pee” and “poop.”
• Dress your child in loose pants that are easy
to pull down and up, not clothes that snap at the crotch.
Or use pull-up diapers or training pants.
• Don’t start toilet learning when there
are big changes, like moving, the birth of a sibling,
changes in child care, a family trip or a divorce.
• Make sure your child’s babysitters, relatives,
child care providers and teachers follow your lead in
toilet learning.
• When you go on a car trip, plan to stop often.
• When your child uses the toilet consistently,
celebrate by letting him choose some “big kid”
underwear. Put him in underwear during the day and take
him to the bathroom often.
• For more tips, visit www.kidshealth.org
or www.drgreene.org.
If Your Child Isn’t
Learning to Use the Potty
Ask your doctor for suggestions. Some child care and
preschool programs require that children be able to
use the toilet. But don’t rush your child just
so he can go to child care. Find another program or
wait a few months. If your child isn’t learning
or can’t use the toilet because of a disability,
find out about your child’s rights to be included
in child care. Call Child Care Connection.
Be Patient with Accidents
Have extra underwear, pants, diaper wipes and plastic
bags on hand at child care and on outings. Don’t
punish your child if she has an accident. You can say,
“That’s okay. Next time, try to let me know
when you have to go so we can do it in the toilet.”
If a child is stressed, accidents are more likely to
happen.
At Night
Many children still need a diaper at night, even when
they use the potty during the day. It’s common
for children to wet at night until age 6 or 7. If a
parent had a history of bedwetting, the child may also.
Help your child not feel ashamed. To prevent accidents,
don’t give your child liquids in the evening,
and make sure he uses the potty just before bedtime.
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