I'm a ER RN. It can be difficult to tell whether a child just isn't making it to the bathroom, or if they can't control it. UTIs can present atypically, not always smelly, not always an aggressive bacteria leading to fever, etc. If the child is incontinent of poop too, there could be underlying constipation (where stool is oozing out around a mass of impacted stool). Depending on the size, that can cause incontinence of both urine and stool. Eventually, when big enough, it would cause pain, but not fever. I've seen it on a 'just in case' X-ray.
I'm not saying there's something wrong with the child. All likelihood is that it is behavioural. But I think it is good practice to rule out any medical issue when a trained child of school age regresses for no apparent reason. If the child can't physically control it because of a medical issue, then behaviour modification approaches won't work, and that would be hard on the child too.


































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