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Potty Training for Children with Challenges. Christy Moran, OTR Tasha Heinze, SI Rachel Harvey, MOM Chris Asbeck, MOM. OBJECTIVES. Participants will understand general potty training
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Potty Training for Children with Challenges • Christy Moran, OTR • Tasha Heinze, SI • Rachel Harvey, MOM • Chris Asbeck, MOM
OBJECTIVES • Participants will understand general potty training • Participants will understand and be able to adapt potty training techniques to meet individual situations and challenges
What’s the Big Deal? • Recognize the need to go • Wait to eliminate • Enter the bathroom • Pull down clothing • Sit on the toilet • Eliminate in the toilet • Use the toilet paper correctly • Pull clothing back up • Flush the toilet • Wash hands with soap • Dry hands
Where to Start • Start teaching steps 5 and 6 • Sit on the toilet and eliminate in the toilet • You will do steps 1-4 for your child • Recognize the need, wait, enter the bathroom and pull down the clothing • Help your child do steps 7-11 • Toilet paper, flush, pull clothes up, wash and dry hands
Is Your Child Ready? Follow simple directions? Sit in a chair for 5 minutes? Dry for 1 ½ hours?
Are You Ready? Time Patience Consistency
Why Start with BMs? • BM’s are consistent • BM’s are infrequent (once or twice a day) • Diapers are continued during BM training • Less time during the day is needed for BM training for child and parent
Let’s GO! • Determine your child’s pattern • Keep a record for 2 weeks • Do not change your routine during this time • Record from the time your child wakes up, every hour if the diaper is wet, soiled, or dry • Use a chart that you only have to check wherever you normally change diapers • This is to establish your child’s pattern of elimination and make your job easier
Determine the Schedule • Look at the 2 weeks data • Circle the BM’s on the sheet • Is there a pattern?
What Do You See? • This child’s pattern is twice a day – around 9am and 5pm • The focus time would be approximately • 8:45 to 9:05 and 4:45 to 5:05
Focus Time(20 minutes) • Put your child on the potty 15min before anticipated BM. (Approx. 8:45am/4:45pm) • Sit for 5min. Praise for sitting • Wait 10min, if not had BM, put your child back on the potty for 5min • Again - Praise for sitting
Keeping Records • During the first week do not alter the plan • Record when your child sits on the potty (we use x for sitting only) • Record when your child has a BM in the potty (P – BM in the potty!!!!!!) • Record when your child has a BM in the diaper (D – BM in the diaper and what time the BM occured)
Checking ProgressDo We Need to Change? • Are the BM’s still around the anticipated time? • If yes – keep the same plan • Is your child consistently earlier or later than the focus time? • If yes – consider altering the time to better match your child’s body schedule
Consistency • Follow the plan every day • Praise for sitting on the potty • Bigger praise for BM in the potty • During this time do not try to urine train • IF your child asks to go to the potty during other times of the day it is OK
Is Your Child Ready to Urine Train? • Begin Urine Training when your child consistently has a BM in the first sitting of toileting times • And they have no more than one BM in the diaper during a typical week
Are You Ready To Urine Train? • Change your child from diapers to training pants during the day • You may want to “double up” on the undies since this may be messy • Children are comfortable wetting in diapers. We need to remove this comfort to be successful. Now comfort comes from staying dry by way of wetting in the potty
Urine Training • Determine a schedule of when your child is most likely to urinate • Look at two weeks data of when they have wet diapers • Circle the U’s on your chart • Find 4 to 6 times a day when they are likely to urinate • Add those times to the schedule you already have
New Schedule • This child has 4 times they are likely to urinate – 7am, 11am, 2pm, and 7pm • Add those times to your new schedule • Use the same focus times as before – start 15 minutes before anticipated urination, sit for 5 min, praise for sitting, 10 min later if still dry, sit for 5 min, praise for sitting
Record Keeping Again • During the first week do not alter the plan • Record when your child sits on the potty (we use x for sitting only) • Record when your child urinates (U) or has a BM • Record if it is in the potty (P) or in the training pants/diaper (D)
Do We Need to Change? • Are the U’s still around the anticipated times? • If yes – keep the same plan • Is your child consistently earlier or later than the focus time? • If yes – consider altering the time to better match your child’s body schedule
Consistency • Follow the plan every day • Do not change the plan the first week • Use the same words/signs/pictures • Use the same toilet if you can. • If your child shows signs of a BM (squatting, straining, going behind the sofa) or needing to urinate (holding themselves, crossing legs) at other times, go ahead and let him potty
Rewards • Use rewards to increase desired behavior • Start small – for just sitting on the potty • Work up to sitting for 5 minutes • Then give for eliminating in the potty • Use immediate rewards – praise, high fives, hugs, stickers, goldfish crackers, teddy grahams • Have them close by (immediate)
Reward or Not? • Decide ahead of time what gets reward • Make it easy to achieve • IF they do not do the behavior – do not give a reward • Quietly lead your child out of the bathroom • Do not talk about the missed reward
No Attention (?) • When they soil or wet their diaper/pants - quietly change them in the bathroom • Try to focus on changing without making eye contact or talking to your child • Then quietly lead them out of the bathroom • If your child is given attention for accidents they are likely to continue
More Keys to Success • Use the regular toilet from the start • If your child is too small, use a smaller seat that sits over the regular one • Have a stool/bench to help your child get onto the toilet and to place their feet on while on the toilet. This will help them feel more secure, and relax better. • If you use a potty chair, keep it in the bathroom
Even More Keys to Success • Limit distractions in the bathroom • Talk about the toilet and what you want your child to do in a concise, non-demanding way • Sing a potty song • Wait patiently • Give reinforcements • Do not turn it into “playtime with mommy”
Phasing Yourself Out • When your child is consistent with sitting on the potty, begin to phase yourself out • Start by attending to other things in the bathroom • Then wait at the door • Then leave the bathroom, start brief then gradually go for longer periods of time
Phasing Out Rewards • As your child is beginning to use the potty with consistency begin phasing out the rewards • IF you have done stickers or food, begin to give them less often or move to High Fives • Continue to tell your child that you are proud of him for going to the potty
Positioning • IF your child has high or low muscle tone, or if they seem to be “wobbly” and lean often when sitting make sure their feet are on a firm surface, like a wooden stool • They may need arm rests, or to hold onto the counter/wall • They may need to sit facing the back, straddling the toilet, with arms on tank • This is also good for boys to learn aiming
Picture Schedules • If your child learns better from pictures than from words you may want to have a picture schedule for toilet training • It should be brief but contain the information your child needs • It could be in a book format for reading OR in line format that you have on the bathroom wall easily visible from the toilet
Vision Impairment • The same readiness signs apply • Follow simple directions • Sit in a chair for 5 minutes • Stays dry for 1 ½ hours • The same positioning tips apply • Have a firm surface for their feet – wood bench
Looking With Your Hands • The child with severe vision impairment will need to touch and feel the toilet and toilet paper with your hands guiding them • They may need to touch the bowel movement or urine to understand • This is ok at the beginning but should not become a part of the regular routine
Constipation • Liquid Intake • Most children need 1 ½ ounces of fluid per pound of body weight • Hot weather, fever, and excessive drooling can cause that to go to 2-3 ounces per pound • Fiber Intake • Add fiber to your child’s diet through fresh fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and cooked beans
What Do They Do? Habit Training Token System Potty Day
Habit-Training Program • Once a day (usually in the morning) the child drinks liquid (2-4oz) prior to toileting • The child sits on the toilet until they urinate in the toilet. (Up to 30 minutes) They may need to stand up or walk in the bathroom a minute • If they have not urinated within 5-10 minutes more liquid is given (8-10oz) while on the toilet
What Else? • Wait until the child urinates. • When the child starts to urinate stay quiet, then praise them for urinating in the toilet. • IF they have an accident while they are standing, try to catch it in a cup and put it in the toilet. Do Not scold. • Do this once a day until they are urinating within 2-3 minutes of getting on the potty
Continuing • Add toilet times during the day • Start with one additional, then when they are urinating within 2-3 minutes each time add another • Eventually your child should urinate whenever you put them on the potty. This means that they are “Habit Trained”
Moving to Independent • Once your child is habit trained, teach words, signs, or use of pictures so they can let you know when they need to potty • Give them reminders or suggestions but do not take them until they ask. When they have accidents change them in the bathroom as quietly as you can without giving attention