Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this Amy Light? That business about seeing little kids only during morning hours was beyond presumptuous. Hello? I know when my kid will be alert and rested, not you. This was a problem for us was that my kid was in early intervention special education and I refused to cancel that for a dental checkup as they would not see us in the afternoon. The speech thing you can't do much about other than stick with the provider for a long time to eventually get a good time slot. The sudden cancellation for a vacation would have sent me over the rails. I must be like you, OP. Very aware of the schedule, do long range planning so as not to miss school. I think your feelings are probably not something parents with typical kids understand. We also have a lot of other therapy and medical appointments and juggling the calendar is something I spend a lot of time on.
Yes but providers do not shape their policies based on one child. They base the policy on the behavior of the majority of kids that they see. Many pediatric dentists are like this because most kids behave better at morning appointments. I am a dentist (not a pediatric dentist), but I do see kids. I agree with this policy.
Anonymous wrote:Is this Amy Light? That business about seeing little kids only during morning hours was beyond presumptuous. Hello? I know when my kid will be alert and rested, not you. This was a problem for us was that my kid was in early intervention special education and I refused to cancel that for a dental checkup as they would not see us in the afternoon. The speech thing you can't do much about other than stick with the provider for a long time to eventually get a good time slot. The sudden cancellation for a vacation would have sent me over the rails. I must be like you, OP. Very aware of the schedule, do long range planning so as not to miss school. I think your feelings are probably not something parents with typical kids understand. We also have a lot of other therapy and medical appointments and juggling the calendar is something I spend a lot of time on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm confused. Doesn't this solve the problem?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Um, yes, you take them out of school to go to the dentist and doctor. That's how it works.
Then when do your kids GO TO SCHOOL? My kids see pediatrician, dentist, orthodontist, ENT, and speech therapist (weekly). A kid can NOT miss this much school.
The speech therapist is the only weekly appt, no?
Two kids, two speech appointments per week.
Are those during school hours or are they after school/weekends?
Are you a single parent?
I am not a single parents but my husband has a 1.5 hour commute, so once he has left early in the morning, I am the only one within distance to handle these things.
Speech is only during school hours or after school. They are not weekends. That would be nice.
Yes, speech is not my problem at the moment. My problem at the moment is the pediatric dentist who just called me to say she's going on vacation the week of March 28-April 1 so she has to reschedule my app.t which was originally scheduled 6 months ago for that Monday afternoon. As you can imagine, all of the kids' parents want the after-school hours I practically now have to wait another 6 months for the next one available.
You are being ridiculous and overly rigid. First, it is no big deal if you push back a routine cleaning. Second, just ask them for the next available after school appointment and ask them to call you if they have an earlier cancellation, which I promise you they will. Don't be so rigid. And stop giving your husband a pass. He can do a morning appointment and then go to work, come on.
You seem more interested in arguing with successful working parents than in finding solutions.
Ok just read your follow up post. Your circumstances are unusual. You should be asking for advice on the kids with special needs board. And next time explain your particular circumstances because absent context you sound ridiculous. If you had just come on and asked for providers with good hours you wouldn't have gotten reamed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm confused. Doesn't this solve the problem?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Um, yes, you take them out of school to go to the dentist and doctor. That's how it works.
Then when do your kids GO TO SCHOOL? My kids see pediatrician, dentist, orthodontist, ENT, and speech therapist (weekly). A kid can NOT miss this much school.
The speech therapist is the only weekly appt, no?
Two kids, two speech appointments per week.
Are those during school hours or are they after school/weekends?
Are you a single parent?
I am not a single parents but my husband has a 1.5 hour commute, so once he has left early in the morning, I am the only one within distance to handle these things.
Speech is only during school hours or after school. They are not weekends. That would be nice.
Yes, speech is not my problem at the moment. My problem at the moment is the pediatric dentist who just called me to say she's going on vacation the week of March 28-April 1 so she has to reschedule my app.t which was originally scheduled 6 months ago for that Monday afternoon. As you can imagine, all of the kids' parents want the after-school hours I practically now have to wait another 6 months for the next one available.
You are being ridiculous and overly rigid. First, it is no big deal if you push back a routine cleaning. Second, just ask them for the next available after school appointment and ask them to call you if they have an earlier cancellation, which I promise you they will. Don't be so rigid. And stop giving your husband a pass. He can do a morning appointment and then go to work, come on.
You seem more interested in arguing with successful working parents than in finding solutions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm confused. Doesn't this solve the problem?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Um, yes, you take them out of school to go to the dentist and doctor. That's how it works.
Then when do your kids GO TO SCHOOL? My kids see pediatrician, dentist, orthodontist, ENT, and speech therapist (weekly). A kid can NOT miss this much school.
The speech therapist is the only weekly appt, no?
Two kids, two speech appointments per week.
Are those during school hours or are they after school/weekends?
Are you a single parent?
I am not a single parents but my husband has a 1.5 hour commute, so once he has left early in the morning, I am the only one within distance to handle these things.
Speech is only during school hours or after school. They are not weekends. That would be nice.
Yes, speech is not my problem at the moment. My problem at the moment is the pediatric dentist who just called me to say she's going on vacation the week of March 28-April 1 so she has to reschedule my app.t which was originally scheduled 6 months ago for that Monday afternoon. As you can imagine, all of the kids' parents want the after-school hours I practically now have to wait another 6 months for the next one available.
For a cleaning? It will be fine. And why does a dentist appt have to take an entire day? Why would you use a vacation day on the dentist? And why doesn't your husband use any of his days or half days to help?
We are getting into the weeds here, but this child, who was born with a cleft lip and cleft palate, had a bone graft on her gum line last summer to take bone from her hip and put it up into her gumline. The graft is pending review now by the plastic surgeon b/c he is not sure if it "took" or not or if we'll have to repeat it this summer. One of the most imperative things is scrupulous dental hygiene (for example, she has to brush floss and use mouthwash after every lunch in the nurse's office in school) b/c it is much more at risk for anything which would not be as damaging to someone with intact gumline bone, etc. Sorry, this is all built upon a house of cards basically and yes, having two children with this special need (which is a lot more than most people think it is-- you don't just have the one operation and then everything is fixed, like Operation Smile and Smile Train make it seem like on their infomercials -- though giving to those organizations IS fine and yes probably does a lot of good to children in third world countries who have no chance of even the first surgery without it). The kids were adopted from a third world country and both were born with cl/cp. Anyway, this is all more than everyone wanted to know and maybe the original fault is not with the providers and I'll just continue sucking it up and trudging forward. Also will probably look for a dentist and/or pediatrician who can do regularly scheduled things (well child visits, cleanings) on the weekends. That sure would help a lot.