Today is World Bedwetting Day and health chiefs in the Isle of Man are letting people affected by the condition that help is at hand.

The Department of Health and Social Care is supporting the global campaign to raise awareness and help encourage those affected to take action and seek advice.

The event was launched two years ago by the International Children’s Continence Society (ICCS) and the European Society for Paediatric Urology (ESPU) to raise awareness among the public and healthcare professionals about a common medical condition.

Bedwetting, also known as nocturnal enuresis, is an uncontrollable leakage of urine while asleep. In children aged five years or over, enuresis is considered abnormal.

The impact of the condition on sufferers and their families is often underestimated and trivialised, which can lead to help often not being sought.

World Bedwetting Day aims to encourage families to discuss bedwetting with their health professionals to get the help they need.

Information is available in the health clinics around the island and anyone affected can contact their school nurse or health visitor for more information.

Further details about the campaign are available at www.worldbedwettingday.com.