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Default Bedwetting alarm

On Feb 4, 3:36*pm, DerbyDad03 wrote:
On Feb 4, 11:39*am, Improveyourlife wrote:





he alarm unit goes on the shoulder and the sensor goes in the
underwear. When the sensor is wet with urine, it triggers a loud alarm
to wake the bed-wetter. The DRI Sleeper alarm unit is held on the
shoulder of the Pyjamas or T-shirt with the Velcro supplied. This
makes sure that the alarm is close to the ear for maximum waking. Over
the next few days or weeks, your child begins to learn to wake more
and more quickly until he or she is beating the alarm and waking
before wetting starts. The pattern now becomes waking up every time he
or she needs to go to the bathroom. Then the final stage begins; your
child will sleep through the night but without wetting the bed or
needing to wake up to go to the bathroom. This is the mature pattern,
your child is capable of waking if she or he needs to go to the
bathroom and even more interesting, it now appears that the
overproduction of urine has stopped.


When an alarm is triggered by urine it starts beeping. But what most
people don't know is that with most alarms, all the time that the
alarm is beeping, there is an electric current passing through the
sensor. Even although the current is very small, it can cause the
urine to become acidic (called electrolysis) and that can irritate
sensitive skin. But the DRI Sleeper is different, as soon as the
Urosensor is wet by urine, it triggers the DRI Sleeper alarm, it
starts beeping, and instantly the special alarm electronics isolate
the Urosensor, and no more current passes through the Urosensor. The
DRI Sleeper alarm unit keeps on beeping, but with no current in the
Urosensor to make the urine acidic. Therefore no acid, and no risk of
skin irritation.


Features:


* * * Small size
* * * Safety Electronics
* * * Volume control (we set it to max - the control is internal so
your child can't change it)
* * * Max alerting sound (we use the sound that wakes the best)
* * * Child friendly colors
* * * The Urosensor goes inside. the underpants right where the urine
hits.
* * * Its soft and flexible - no hard plastic clips or domes.
* * * There are 9 pairs of sensing strips on BOTH sides for maximum
detection
* * * There are no metal contacts and so it can't corrode or
deteriorate in urine
* * * It is completely moulded and easy to clean and dry for instant
reuse.
* * * There are no connections to break.


Product Code: ANZ-Excel


Bedwetting Alarm


Indications:


Genetic condition, physical or emotional problem and obstructed
breathing while they sleep.


The DRI Sleeper alarm unit keeps on beeping, but with no current
in the Urosensor to make the urine acidic...no risk of skin
irritation.

Upgrade suggestion:

Eliminate the beeper and increase the current in the Urosensor. Make
the urine more acidic thus causing increased skin irritation. *The
irritation will keep the user awake and when they have to pee they can
just walk over to the bathroom. Bedwetting problem solved.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -



Or if the sleeper needs some encouragement on waking up... have him
tie an extermity of himself to a dog, say on the neck of a doberman.
Next, you will need two animals. One that does not like water, like a
cat, and one that can take it or leave it. Have the cat sleep with the
patient in the same bed. When it gets irritated from the sudden onset
of wetness, all h_ll breaks loose. Optionally, a CD/tape clock-radio
alarm can go off from a trip wire triggered by the annoyed cat that
will: 1. startle the doberman to run in the general direction of the
closest bathroom and 2. to have the former sleeper follow the dog in a
hurried manner, as he is tied to it. To add to the goal, perhaps loud
cat meowing can be played, or even smaller dogs barking. If all else
fails, and you are desperate, follow the next vehicle with a siren
going down the street with your car and a tape-recorder microphone out
of the window at 60 mph. That should suffice for a nice supportive
wake-up. When in doubt, use all three cds/tapes for different nights.
Leave these unmarked for best effect.

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