Dental treatment for autistic children

Hi.

Are there any places (dentist) who specialise in autism. 

My son is three and non verbal and needs dental treatment. 

My regular dentist was useless and seemed to have no patience when she couldn't get him to sit still.

Asked her for advice on where I could take him and was told to try the internet (moron).

Cant believe how little information is out there for this situation.

Would appreciate any suggestions or advice,  surely others have the same problem. 

Thank you 

Parents
  • I don't know if this applies - but we took our baby daughter along to the dentist whenever we went for check-ups or anything just so she was totally used to the environment, noises and smells and the procedures and people - from when she was way too young to understand so it became 'just another place'.

    As she got older, when we got out of the chair, the dentist would let her jump in for a ride up and down and a quick look at all her growing teeth.     

    We followed it up with lunch out or something so the whole experience was fun and nothing to be frightened of - we were smiling and chatting the whole way through so why would she be concerned?

    When it came time for her real check-ups, she was eager to hop up in the moving chair for a ride and to tell the dentist all about her latest adventures (we through her into a lot of things when she was young to expand her world to avoid these kind of stress issues).

    We did the same procedure at hairdressers, dog parks, feeding large numbers of birds in the park - and doctors - just so that her 'normal' interactions were always very positive to make any kind of negative 'doing' appointment into a low-stress situation..

Reply
  • I don't know if this applies - but we took our baby daughter along to the dentist whenever we went for check-ups or anything just so she was totally used to the environment, noises and smells and the procedures and people - from when she was way too young to understand so it became 'just another place'.

    As she got older, when we got out of the chair, the dentist would let her jump in for a ride up and down and a quick look at all her growing teeth.     

    We followed it up with lunch out or something so the whole experience was fun and nothing to be frightened of - we were smiling and chatting the whole way through so why would she be concerned?

    When it came time for her real check-ups, she was eager to hop up in the moving chair for a ride and to tell the dentist all about her latest adventures (we through her into a lot of things when she was young to expand her world to avoid these kind of stress issues).

    We did the same procedure at hairdressers, dog parks, feeding large numbers of birds in the park - and doctors - just so that her 'normal' interactions were always very positive to make any kind of negative 'doing' appointment into a low-stress situation..

Children
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