• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Home
  • News
  • Education
  • Events
  • Interviews
    • Career spotlight
  • Opinion
    • Professional Dilemmas
    • Patient perspective
  • PIPcast
  • Jobs
  • Business Directory

Pharmacy in Practice

EDX/20/1154
Date of prep: December 2020

Prescribing information and
adverse events reporting

For healthcare professionals only

PIP CPD challenge: How much do you know about bedwetting?

8th March 2020 by PIP editor Leave a Comment

 

Welcome to the Pharmacy in Practice CPD challenge.

 

Add your e-mail address below if you want us to send you an email with the results of this CPD challenge for your records. We will not use your email address for anything else other than to send you the results of this challenge.

 

We would love you to sign up for our daily and weekly dose emails. You will find a sign-up form below this article.

 

(For details on how we will deal with your personal information, please see our privacy policy. We will never pass on your e-mail address without your permission.)

 

Name Email

True or false secondary bedwetting is bedwetting that occurs after the child has been dry at night for more than 12 months?

True or false primary bedwetting with daytime symptoms is usually caused by disorders of the upper urinary tract?

True or false primary bedwetting is most commonly caused by an overactive bladder, but may also be caused by congenital malformations or neurological disorders?

True or false family problems (vulnerable child or family) can be a cause of secondary bedwetting?

True or false girls are more likely than boys to have bedwetting?

True or false the prevalence of bedwetting in children 10 years of age is 5%?

True or false about 1% of children continue to wet the bed into adulthood?

True or false primary bedwetting without daytime symptoms is thought to be caused by sleep arousal difficulties, polyuria, and/or bladder dysfunction?


clock.png

Time is Up!

Share this:

  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Telegram (Opens in new window)
  • Click to email this to a friend (Opens in new window)

Related

Filed Under: CPD challenges

Register for our upcoming webinar and live Q&A

About PIP editor

Pharmacy in Practice is a UK pharmacy publication with its roots in Scotland.

Reader Interactions

Begin the discussion right here Cancel reply

Primary Sidebar

Categories

Follow Us

  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter

PIP business directory

Letters to the editor

Letters to the editor

Pharmacies should be allowed to supply rapid antibody tests

The ‘ART’ of Scottish community pharmacy is all about data

How 56 community pharmacies helped to eradicate hepatitis C

I failed by one mark and now can’t register as a pharmacist

More letters to the editor here...

Blogs

💊 PIP live pharmacy blog

Winter stresses must not ‘destabilise’ general practice

What is it like to depend on medicine to treat endometriosis?

Opinion

Why is pharmacy not integral to government mass vaccination plans?

Pharmacy Covid-19 vaccination involvement is a ‘no-brainer’

The great patient medication returns debacle

CPD Challenges

💊 CPD Challenge: How well do you understand pulmonary embolisms?

💊 CPD Challenge: Prescribing and dispensing clozapine

💊 CPD Challenge: Oral anticoagulants – Dabigatran

More CPD challenges here...

© 2021 · About Pharmacy In Practice · Site mantained by Mike

This site is for healthcare professionals, please confirm you are a healthcare professional to continue.

YES

loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.
Pharmacy In Practice uses cookies, by continuing to use this site we will assume you are ok with that Find out more.