Things have been too quiet around here, so here is something to stimulate some discussion (hopefully)
What do we really mean when we use the term “Wetting?"
Diapers often are referred to as having the capacity for one, two, or even three “wettings.” Although we each have our individual urinary habits is there any known yardstick for what we mean by the term “wetting” in terms of ounces? Has anyone standardized the terminology?
I grant that individual urine volumes are highly variable from one person to the next.
When I think of a diapered ‘wetting” I do not mean necessarily the capacity of a “full" bladder but the amount we normally pee at one time (which I think is less).
In some medical sources, bladder capacity commonly is given as 16 oz. The desire to urinate is listed as usually beginning when it contains between 5 – 12 ounces, but typically about 7 - 8 ounces. At 14 ounces we really need to “go.”
I think that most of us who are incontinent usually do not wait to pee until our bladder contains 16 oz. Particularly, I would think that most of us who pee in a diaper initiate urination at a lesser capacity, say around 8-12 oz. for those with some control and probably smaller volumes for those with little or no control.
Although I have not weighed my diapers to measure it, I doubt that for me a “wetting” would be on the upper end of the range or my total fluid loss through urination would be unrealistically sky-high! Actually, as I have varying periods of some control and others of nearly no control, I am using theoretical average figures below.
O.k., to provide some perspective, I usually wear a ConfiDry 24/7 with a 18 oz North Shore Care booster. When I remove the diaper (after about 6 - 6.5 hours) it is very heavy, the central and lower front portions are totally saturated and bulging and the booster is about 80% saturated. The upper front and the rear of the diaper remain mostly dry. The diaper probably would leak in the next 30 minutes to an hour.
Lets see — for me, a very highly hydrated day (coffee, tea, beer) might involve 4 diapers X 14 oz per wetting X 2.5 wettings per diaper = 35 oz per diaper or a total of 140 oz (4.3 quarts)
Slightly more realistically, a more typical day might involve 3 diapers per day X 2.5 wettings per diaper X 12 oz per wetting = 30 oz per diaper or a total of 90 oz (about 3 quarts).
In terms of ounces, what do you think a standard diapered “wetting” should be considered to be? Think of this for the general incontinent population, not just yourself.
If anyone knows of any reliable references I would love to see them.
--John