Most parents dealing with a child’s chronic bowel or bladder incontinence are handed a medical explanation and a prescription. What they are rarely given is a scientific account of why the problem persists or what is actually happening inside the child’s brain and body. That gap is precisely what Dr. Robert W. Collins, a clinical psychologist, set out to close when he wrote The Clean Kid Manual. The book is grounded in learning theory, neurological science, and years of clinical observation. It offers a treatment approach built on a fundamentally different understanding of what these disorders actually are.
The standard medical view looks at encopresis and enuresis primarily as physical problems. The colon is backed up, the stool is too hard, the bladder is overactive. The logical response is therefore a physical one: soften the stool, clear the bowel, and wait for the body to regulate itself. Dr. Robert W. Collins does not dispute the physical dimension of these disorders. His central argument, however, is that the physical explanation is incomplete, and that incompleteness is the reason so many children do not recover under conventional care. What standard treatment overlooks is the brain, and specifically the stimulus-response connection that governs how the body learns to go to the toilet.
In a healthy child, recognizing the urge to void and responding to it successfully on the toilet is largely automatic. It is a learned reflex arc: the stimulus from the colon or bladder is perceived, the brain processes it, and the right muscle response happens. This arc has been broken for kids with encopresis or enuresis. The holding response, which is what the brain does first when it feels an urge, becomes the main and normal response. The release response, which should follow naturally on the toilet, fails to activate reliably. The result is a condition that looks like stubbornness from the outside but is, in reality, a deeply ingrained neurological habit.
Understanding encopresis as a learning disorder immediately exposes the core flaw in the oral treatment approach. Stool softeners and laxatives taken by mouth take six to ten hours to produce a result. From a behavioral science standpoint, that delay is devastating. For a stimulus-response connection to form in the brain, the stimulus and the response must occur close together in time. When hours separate them, no meaningful association can be made. The bowel empties, but no habit is formed, and the next day is just like the one before it. To make things worse, very soft stool from oral agents is hard for the brain’s colorectal sampling mechanism to recognise as a clear signal to void, which makes things even more confusing and can quietly reinforce the very holding behaviours the treatment is trying to break.
Photo Courtesy: Dr. Robert W. Collins
The neurological picture is just one part of the whole picture. In addition to the broken reflex arc, many kids with chronic encopresis have strong psychological ties to the toilet. The bathroom has become a sign of anxiety and holding on instead of letting go because of repeated failure, discomfort, and family conflict. This is a conditioned response in the behavioral psychology sense, and it explains why encouragement and instruction alone cannot break the cycle. The holding response is not a conscious choice. It is an automatic reaction to a situation that the child’s brain has come to associate with distress.
Dr. Robert W. Collins draws on his clinical experience in treating anxiety and related conditions to address this directly. His approach mirrors the principles of exposure therapy, one of the well-supported methods in psychological practice. The child is gradually and repeatedly brought to the feared situation under conditions designed to produce success rather than failure. Each successful sit weakens the anxiety response and builds a new association in its place. Over time, the toilet becomes a cue for relief rather than dread. This psychological recovery, running alongside the neurological retraining, is what distinguishes the approach from interventions that address only the physical dimension.
What sets The Clean Kid Manual apart is that Dr. Robert W. Collins does not simply explain the science. He translates every principle into a clear, doable plan that parents can use at home. The neurological theory is explained in accessible terms. The psychological reasoning is made clear. Parents are not just told what to do; they are shown why it works. That understanding matters when the process becomes difficult, and the temptation to quit is real. It gives parents the confidence to hold their course through a child’s resistance, which is often where other approaches quietly fall apart. The Clean Kid Manual is a book about what happens when behavioral science is applied seriously to a problem that medicine alone has not been able to solve.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, a diagnosis, or a recommendation for any specific treatment. Parents and caregivers should consult a qualified healthcare professional before making decisions about their child’s care.












