Pants With Internal Sensors Help Curb Bed-Wetting

November 10, 2020 Off By Rowena Cletus

Bed-wetting can be a problem for some children. In most cases, this type of behavior stems from an underdeveloped nerve-signal’s inability to wake up a child when it’s time to pee. This is where Swedish based Pjama’s high tech clothes come to the rescue. The company’s pants and shorts can be fitted with patented built-in ‘wet-sensors’.

When a child passes urine in his/her sleep and wets the inner lighting of their Pjama pants or shorts, the transmitter inside the apparel is activated, which triggers an alarm. This wakes the child up, and eventually, allows them to learn to wake up on their own when they need to pee.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

The transmitter can also be connected to a smartphone, which allows the user to be notified when the alarm goes off. In the App you can also register the child’s sleeping habits, the success rate of the treatment and much more. This will allow parents to get a better understanding on how well their children are able to sleep at night and how often they wet the bed.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PPRHNcJrOPo

According to Global metadata, treatments like that from Pjama, have an 80% success rate, which sees kids being cured of the problem within 3 months. The best part of this issue is, there’s no need for medication or medical examinations.

Pjama is a world-renowned sleepwear company that sells its apparel in about 70 countries. This new tech will not only help kids sleep better, but enable them to come out of their bed-wetting problem quickly without the need for special guidance tools or traumatizing practices.