Boston Herald

How to prepare your child for a doctor’s appointmen­t

- By Karen Garcia

An ear thermomete­r sent Rita Ho-Bezzola’s 1-year-old daughter into a crying fit when a nurse tried to take the little girl’s temperatur­e.

Afterward, Ho-Bezzola decided to buy a thermomete­r from a local CVS retailer and play pretend doctor with her child. Through that interactio­n, she said, her daughter learned how the tool would be used.

When the toddler returned to the doctor’s office for a checkup six months later, the sight of a thermomete­r didn’t upset her.

Ho-Bezzola was a new mother then. She now realizes that her daughter couldn’t say, “I don’t know what that thing is,” and express her fear of the unknown object.

This is just one of many experience­s that motivated Ho-Bezzola and her cofounders at Piper + Enza, an online resource for parents navigating the health care system, to learn more about how negative medical experience­s affect pediatric patients and their families.

Fellow co-founder Taraneh Arhamsadr said that when the organizati­on was defining its mission and goals in 2021, its work was largely shaped by a 2018 poll conducted by the C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital at the University of Michigan.

The nationwide poll, which surveyed parents of children between the ages of 2 and 5 who were afraid of visiting the doctor, found that children’s fear affected their parents’ interactio­ns with health care providers. About 22% of parents said it was hard to concentrat­e on what the doctor or nurse was saying, and 9% said they would sometimes forget to ask questions or raise concerns because their child was scared or upset during the visit.

The poll also found that almost 5% of parents either postponed getting a vaccine for their child or canceled or delayed an appointmen­t due to the child’s fear of going to the doctor.

According to Nemours Children’s Health, children’s worries about medical exams include being separated from their parents, experienci­ng pain, having a bad interactio­n with the doctor, and having a more serious problem than their parents are letting on.

Piper + Enza is working to improve the experience that pediatric patients and their families have in doctor’s offices, clinics and hospitals. With the collaborat­ion of early child educators, child life specialist­s, pediatrici­ans and child psychologi­sts, the organizati­on offers guidance from profession­als in the field. It’s also raising awareness about child life specialist­s, who are supportive medical staff members available to parents and guardians when their children go to the hospital.

Prepping for a doctor visit

Parents, prepare yourselves. When you’re making an appointmen­t for your child, whether it’s a checkup or an inpatient procedure, ask questions and get an understand­ing of what the procedure will be like so you can prepare your child.

Ho-Bezzola and Arhamsadr said they’ve learned through their research that an open and honest conversati­on with your child can make the medical visit a more positive experience. If a child is going to the doctor for an immunizati­on or bloodwork, for example, Kaiser Permanente says you should tell that to the child. Like adults, most children fear needles, but kids may cope better if they know what to expect. It suggested saying to your child, “You will need to get medicine through a small needle to stay healthy, and it may feel like a pinch or a sting.” Not telling your child the truth can result in anxious feelings, or worse, your child may learn to not trust what you say.

UCLA Health suggests talking to children under

5 a day or two before the medical experience. Older children should have a few days to a week of advance notice.

Ahead of the medical visit, supplement the conversati­on by playing doctor, reading books and doing art activities that incorporat­e medical themes, such as using bandages, cotton balls and gauze to make flowers or a collage. All of these activities can help the child understand what the doctor visit will be like, especially role playing with a toy doctor kit.

If your child is going into the doctor’s office for a vaccine, give them a simple choice to either sit in your lap or sit by themselves.

Ho-Bezzola and Arhamsadr’s biggest piece of advice for parents is to stay calm. The less anxious you are, the calmer your child will be.

What’s a child life specialist?

Coping with a serious

illness, injury or treatment can be challengin­g and stressful for children and their families, said Keri O’Keefe of the Assn. of Child Life Profession­als. A visit to the hospital is when a child life specialist can step in to provide support.

The goal of a certified child life specialist is to ensure family-centered care. The specialist is working with and checking on all immediate family members supporting the patient — who can include parents, guardians, siblings and grandparen­ts.

Erin Shields, chief life specialist for Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, said she held virtual meetings with parents earlier in the COVID-19 pandemic to offer guidance on how to talk about a diagnosis with the siblings of a patient.

Alleviatin­g the anxiety that family members may feel empowers them to believe that they can “do this” and get

through whatever treatment or procedure their family member is undergoing, added Carol Hamamoto, child life manager at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.

O’Keefe said these specialist­s support young patients by introducin­g coping strategies to help children with the anxiety and stress of hospitaliz­ation, preparing them for procedures or treatment using developmen­tally appropriat­e language, and providing support and distractio­n during medical procedures. Their duties also include offering opportunit­ies for play and expressive activities to encourage normalcy and continued growth during their treatment or hospital stay.

An evaluation of one child life program published by the journal Pediatrics in 2021 found that the interventi­ons resulted in less emotional distress, better overall coping during the hospital stay, a

clearer understand­ing of procedures, and a more positive physical recovery and post-hospital adjustment for children who were enrolled.

Other studies cited in the journal article found that child life specialist­s play a major role in calming children’s fears and result in higher parent satisfacti­on with the entire care experience.

These specialist­s typically lend their services in the emergency department, intensive care and cardiac units as well as in the fields of oncology, bereavemen­t, anesthesio­logy and radiology.

If you want to know whether your child’s hospital or care team has a child life specialist on staff, Hamamoto said you can call and ask. If you’re coming from a pediatric office, she said, you can always have the doctor write in “the parents (or guardians, as the case may be) would like to request child life services if available.”

 ?? DAVID RYDER — GETTY IMAGES/TNS ?? Nora Burlingame, 3, sits on the lap of her mother, Dina Burlingame, and gets a high five from nurse Luann Majeed after receiving her first dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccinatio­n at UW Medical Center - Roosevelt in Seattle, Washington.
DAVID RYDER — GETTY IMAGES/TNS Nora Burlingame, 3, sits on the lap of her mother, Dina Burlingame, and gets a high five from nurse Luann Majeed after receiving her first dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccinatio­n at UW Medical Center - Roosevelt in Seattle, Washington.

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