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Sustained Dryness In order to evaluate
how well the Try for Dry system can keep your child dry, a study
titled Sustainability of Remission of Pediatric Primary Nocturnal
Enuresis: Comparison of Remission Using a Try for Dry Treatment Plan
vs. Other Plans was conducted to follow up the study titled Office
Management of Pediatric Nocturnal Enuresis – A Comparison of Physician
Advised and Parent Alternative Treatment
This graph shows the results of the sustainability study, which was
presented at the October, 2007 meeting of the Society for Urological
Nurses Association.
The study followed two groups of children. One group’s bedwetting
was corrected using Try for Dry, and the other group was treated with
any other method.
9 months after treatment was completed with Try for
Dry, the study found that night dryness was sustained in about 3/4 of
the cases.
However, only about 6 months after treatment with
other systems was complete, only about 1/3 of the patients had
sustained dryness.
*71% of the group
who had used the Try for Dry system was still dry.
**Only 33% of the group
who used other systems was still dry.
This means families who used the Try for Dry system
were more than twice as likely to stay dry
than families who did not.

Reference
Diaz Saldano, D, Chaviano, AH, Maizels, M: Sustainability of
Remission of Pediatric Primary Nocturnal Enuresis: Comparison of
Remission Using a Try for Dry Treatment Plan vs. Other Plans.
Accepted for Publication – Urology Nursing. The Journal of the Society
for Urological Nurses. 2007
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