Guest guest Posted January 24, 2010 Report Share Posted January 24, 2010 Hi , The only one I have experience with is Melatonin and probiotics. I have been giving my son 1mg of this about 30-45 minutes before bed time for years now and we love it. It makes him sleepy without knocking him out and it has worked steadily for years with zero problems. Doesn’t appear to make him grumpy or anything. I don’t know of any side effects, it is an anti oxidant. We love it. As for the probiotics, I give that to my son and myself and I don’t think I see any side effects....I haven't read of any and I have done a lot of reading on probiotics and they can be so helpful for most people and I have not read about any negative side effects from them. I take 20-30 billion a day and my son around 10. Good luck! From: Cohane Sent: Sunday, January 24, 2010 8:08 AM To: sList ; specialmomsspecialkids Subject: Feedback on meds Hi Everyone, We just received the plan of treatment for my 3 children from Dr. Udell which included specific food avoidance diet for all 3 (many food allergies identified) and the following: Probiotics for all Glutathione for the younger two (for speech & language improvement) Malatonine for my son (for fogginess) even though he sleeps fairly well LDN (low dose Naltrexone crème for my daughter (for focus and attention) Any feedback on these meds would be greatly appreciated. I am looking for what to expect in side effects, if anyone has had success with the use of these, and if I should have any medical reservations in using these products. Thanks in advance. Cohane, LCSW creating connections and strengthening families by providing developmental-behavioral interventions and psychotherapy services Cohanecomcast (DOT) net Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 24, 2010 Report Share Posted January 24, 2010 Hi , The only one I have experience with is Melatonin and probiotics. I have been giving my son 1mg of this about 30-45 minutes before bed time for years now and we love it. It makes him sleepy without knocking him out and it has worked steadily for years with zero problems. Doesn’t appear to make him grumpy or anything. I don’t know of any side effects, it is an anti oxidant. We love it. As for the probiotics, I give that to my son and myself and I don’t think I see any side effects....I haven't read of any and I have done a lot of reading on probiotics and they can be so helpful for most people and I have not read about any negative side effects from them. I take 20-30 billion a day and my son around 10. Good luck! From: Cohane Sent: Sunday, January 24, 2010 8:08 AM To: sList ; specialmomsspecialkids Subject: Feedback on meds Hi Everyone, We just received the plan of treatment for my 3 children from Dr. Udell which included specific food avoidance diet for all 3 (many food allergies identified) and the following: Probiotics for all Glutathione for the younger two (for speech & language improvement) Malatonine for my son (for fogginess) even though he sleeps fairly well LDN (low dose Naltrexone crème for my daughter (for focus and attention) Any feedback on these meds would be greatly appreciated. I am looking for what to expect in side effects, if anyone has had success with the use of these, and if I should have any medical reservations in using these products. Thanks in advance. Cohane, LCSW creating connections and strengthening families by providing developmental-behavioral interventions and psychotherapy services Cohanecomcast (DOT) net Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 24, 2010 Report Share Posted January 24, 2010 Hi , The only one I have experience with is Melatonin and probiotics. I have been giving my son 1mg of this about 30-45 minutes before bed time for years now and we love it. It makes him sleepy without knocking him out and it has worked steadily for years with zero problems. Doesn’t appear to make him grumpy or anything. I don’t know of any side effects, it is an anti oxidant. We love it. As for the probiotics, I give that to my son and myself and I don’t think I see any side effects....I haven't read of any and I have done a lot of reading on probiotics and they can be so helpful for most people and I have not read about any negative side effects from them. I take 20-30 billion a day and my son around 10. Good luck! From: Cohane Sent: Sunday, January 24, 2010 8:08 AM To: sList ; specialmomsspecialkids Subject: Feedback on meds Hi Everyone, We just received the plan of treatment for my 3 children from Dr. Udell which included specific food avoidance diet for all 3 (many food allergies identified) and the following: Probiotics for all Glutathione for the younger two (for speech & language improvement) Malatonine for my son (for fogginess) even though he sleeps fairly well LDN (low dose Naltrexone crème for my daughter (for focus and attention) Any feedback on these meds would be greatly appreciated. I am looking for what to expect in side effects, if anyone has had success with the use of these, and if I should have any medical reservations in using these products. Thanks in advance. Cohane, LCSW creating connections and strengthening families by providing developmental-behavioral interventions and psychotherapy services Cohanecomcast (DOT) net Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 25, 2010 Report Share Posted January 25, 2010 > • Probiotics for all can cause temporary diarrhea, good for the immune system. Rare(2 cases in the literature) side effect of sepsis (probiotics as an infection) but you have to be immune deficient and in the ICU for that to happen. If you get diarrhea, don't stop. Back off, increase slower. > • Glutathione for the younger two (for speech & language improvement) antiinflammatory, natural chemical in the body, gets depleted very easily no known side effects from too much, as it is realllllyyyyyy hard to get too much naturally. Most of us suffer from too little, and that is a not nice place to be (think of a toxic waste dump that runs out of filters) > • Melatonin for my son (for fogginess) even though he sleeps fairly > well normal substance in the body hormone--frequently deficient in stressed people makes us sleepy we do not know much else about long term supplementation. Not sure I would use it if he is sleeping well, unless I was concerned about the depth of his sleep, or to make sure the sleep cycle was absolutely normal. > • LDN (low dose Naltrexone crème for my daughter (for focus and > attention) blocks your body's natural opiates. Immune cells have opiate receptors (we do not know the purpose) but giving low dose naltrexone seems to change the balance of immune cells (back to an antiinflammatory ratio) no known side effects > Any feedback on these meds would be greatly appreciated. I am > looking for what to expect in side effects, if anyone has had > success with the use of these, and if I should have any medical > reservations in using these products. > Basically all of these help more than they could possibly hurt. Very safe. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 26, 2010 Report Share Posted January 26, 2010 Very helpful…my thoughts initially for these things but still was a bit unsure so it is helpful to get confirmation. Cohane, LCSW creating connections and strengthening families by providing developmental-behavioral interventions and psychotherapy services Cohane@... From: sList [mailto:sList ] On Behalf Of airbucket@... Sent: Sunday, January 24, 2010 8:02 PM To: sList Subject: Re: Feedback on meds Hi , The only one I have experience with is Melatonin and probiotics. I have been giving my son 1mg of this about 30-45 minutes before bed time for years now and we love it. It makes him sleepy without knocking him out and it has worked steadily for years with zero problems. Doesn’t appear to make him grumpy or anything. I don’t know of any side effects, it is an anti oxidant. We love it. As for the probiotics, I give that to my son and myself and I don’t think I see any side effects....I haven't read of any and I have done a lot of reading on probiotics and they can be so helpful for most people and I have not read about any negative side effects from them. I take 20-30 billion a day and my son around 10. Good luck! From: Cohane Sent: Sunday, January 24, 2010 8:08 AM To: sList ; specialmomsspecialkids Subject: Feedback on meds Hi Everyone, We just received the plan of treatment for my 3 children from Dr. Udell which included specific food avoidance diet for all 3 (many food allergies identified) and the following: Probiotics for all Glutathione for the younger two (for speech & language improvement) Malatonine for my son (for fogginess) even though he sleeps fairly well LDN (low dose Naltrexone crème for my daughter (for focus and attention) Any feedback on these meds would be greatly appreciated. I am looking for what to expect in side effects, if anyone has had success with the use of these, and if I should have any medical reservations in using these products. Thanks in advance. Cohane, LCSW creating connections and strengthening families by providing developmental-behavioral interventions and psychotherapy services Cohanecomcast (DOT) net No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 8.5.432 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/2642 - Release Date: 01/24/10 07:33:00 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 26, 2010 Report Share Posted January 26, 2010 Have you seen any success with the use of these products? Cohane, LCSW creating connections and strengthening families by providing developmental-behavioral interventions and psychotherapy services Cohane@... Re: Feedback on meds > • Probiotics for all can cause temporary diarrhea, good for the immune system. Rare(2 cases in the literature) side effect of sepsis (probiotics as an infection) but you have to be immune deficient and in the ICU for that to happen. If you get diarrhea, don't stop. Back off, increase slower. > • Glutathione for the younger two (for speech & language improvement) antiinflammatory, natural chemical in the body, gets depleted very easily no known side effects from too much, as it is realllllyyyyyy hard to get too much naturally. Most of us suffer from too little, and that is a not nice place to be (think of a toxic waste dump that runs out of filters) > • Melatonin for my son (for fogginess) even though he sleeps fairly > well normal substance in the body hormone--frequently deficient in stressed people makes us sleepy we do not know much else about long term supplementation. Not sure I would use it if he is sleeping well, unless I was concerned about the depth of his sleep, or to make sure the sleep cycle was absolutely normal. > • LDN (low dose Naltrexone crème for my daughter (for focus and > attention) blocks your body's natural opiates. Immune cells have opiate receptors (we do not know the purpose) but giving low dose naltrexone seems to change the balance of immune cells (back to an antiinflammatory ratio) no known side effects > Any feedback on these meds would be greatly appreciated. I am > looking for what to expect in side effects, if anyone has had > success with the use of these, and if I should have any medical > reservations in using these products. > Basically all of these help more than they could possibly hurt. Very safe. > > > ------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 26, 2010 Report Share Posted January 26, 2010 > > Have you seen any success with the use of these products? > Cohane, LCSW > > Probiotics, absolutely. Immune and GI in general--patients, self, family, family dog, Melatonin, does not work on me, does on my husband, works some on my son, yes on most of my patients. Glutathione, gave a small temporary improvement my child. At the time he got it, it was only avail IV, expensive, noxious and a pain to go get. Have not tried the topicals or the nebulized, although a doc I know uses the nebulized personally. We now use SAM-e, which is a precursor, and that works. We use a lot. He is bipolar, and we were concerned (it has been shown to cause mania in bipolars, but no knowing if they have had cell lipids corrected first with omega 3's. His have been, so we tried it. Increased slowly and no mania at all. Helps joint inflammation and depression, as well as liver detox. If you are worried about liver detox, then ask your doc if you should also be giving milk thistle and Co-Q-10 (or ubiquinone). LDN--tried it for myself and my son, did not do much for either ( both for spectrum issues, and for an autoimmune arthritis). I may try it again. Have not used it for patients yet. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 26, 2010 Report Share Posted January 26, 2010 > > Have you seen any success with the use of these products? > Cohane, LCSW > > Probiotics, absolutely. Immune and GI in general--patients, self, family, family dog, Melatonin, does not work on me, does on my husband, works some on my son, yes on most of my patients. Glutathione, gave a small temporary improvement my child. At the time he got it, it was only avail IV, expensive, noxious and a pain to go get. Have not tried the topicals or the nebulized, although a doc I know uses the nebulized personally. We now use SAM-e, which is a precursor, and that works. We use a lot. He is bipolar, and we were concerned (it has been shown to cause mania in bipolars, but no knowing if they have had cell lipids corrected first with omega 3's. His have been, so we tried it. Increased slowly and no mania at all. Helps joint inflammation and depression, as well as liver detox. If you are worried about liver detox, then ask your doc if you should also be giving milk thistle and Co-Q-10 (or ubiquinone). LDN--tried it for myself and my son, did not do much for either ( both for spectrum issues, and for an autoimmune arthritis). I may try it again. Have not used it for patients yet. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 27, 2010 Report Share Posted January 27, 2010 Hi , Cant thank you enough for your feedback – very helpful! Sounds like you have both personal and professional experience in this area. One last question…are you and your family doing a diet with these and if so – how do you know if positive changes came about from the meds or diet? Trying to decide if I should do meds first before diet, vice versa or both together…just seems so overwhelming. I have already implemented propbiotics and Vitamins/minerals but nothing more. Cohane, LCSW creating connections and strengthening families by providing developmental-behavioral interventions and psychotherapy services Cohane@... From: sList [mailto:sList ] On Behalf Of Cislo Sent: Tuesday, January 26, 2010 8:59 PM To: sList Subject: Re: Feedback on meds > > Have you seen any success with the use of these products? > Cohane, LCSW > > Probiotics, absolutely. Immune and GI in general--patients, self, family, family dog, Melatonin, does not work on me, does on my husband, works some on my son, yes on most of my patients. Glutathione, gave a small temporary improvement my child. At the time he got it, it was only avail IV, expensive, noxious and a pain to go get. Have not tried the topicals or the nebulized, although a doc I know uses the nebulized personally. We now use SAM-e, which is a precursor, and that works. We use a lot. He is bipolar, and we were concerned (it has been shown to cause mania in bipolars, but no knowing if they have had cell lipids corrected first with omega 3's. His have been, so we tried it. Increased slowly and no mania at all. Helps joint inflammation and depression, as well as liver detox. If you are worried about liver detox, then ask your doc if you should also be giving milk thistle and Co-Q-10 (or ubiquinone). LDN--tried it for myself and my son, did not do much for either ( both for spectrum issues, and for an autoimmune arthritis). I may try it again. Have not used it for patients yet. No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 8.5.432 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/2644 - Release Date: 01/26/10 07:46:00 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 27, 2010 Report Share Posted January 27, 2010 Hi , Cant thank you enough for your feedback – very helpful! Sounds like you have both personal and professional experience in this area. One last question…are you and your family doing a diet with these and if so – how do you know if positive changes came about from the meds or diet? Trying to decide if I should do meds first before diet, vice versa or both together…just seems so overwhelming. I have already implemented propbiotics and Vitamins/minerals but nothing more. Cohane, LCSW creating connections and strengthening families by providing developmental-behavioral interventions and psychotherapy services Cohane@... From: sList [mailto:sList ] On Behalf Of Cislo Sent: Tuesday, January 26, 2010 8:59 PM To: sList Subject: Re: Feedback on meds > > Have you seen any success with the use of these products? > Cohane, LCSW > > Probiotics, absolutely. Immune and GI in general--patients, self, family, family dog, Melatonin, does not work on me, does on my husband, works some on my son, yes on most of my patients. Glutathione, gave a small temporary improvement my child. At the time he got it, it was only avail IV, expensive, noxious and a pain to go get. Have not tried the topicals or the nebulized, although a doc I know uses the nebulized personally. We now use SAM-e, which is a precursor, and that works. We use a lot. He is bipolar, and we were concerned (it has been shown to cause mania in bipolars, but no knowing if they have had cell lipids corrected first with omega 3's. His have been, so we tried it. Increased slowly and no mania at all. Helps joint inflammation and depression, as well as liver detox. If you are worried about liver detox, then ask your doc if you should also be giving milk thistle and Co-Q-10 (or ubiquinone). LDN--tried it for myself and my son, did not do much for either ( both for spectrum issues, and for an autoimmune arthritis). I may try it again. Have not used it for patients yet. No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 8.5.432 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/2644 - Release Date: 01/26/10 07:46:00 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 27, 2010 Report Share Posted January 27, 2010 Hi , Cant thank you enough for your feedback – very helpful! Sounds like you have both personal and professional experience in this area. One last question…are you and your family doing a diet with these and if so – how do you know if positive changes came about from the meds or diet? Trying to decide if I should do meds first before diet, vice versa or both together…just seems so overwhelming. I have already implemented propbiotics and Vitamins/minerals but nothing more. Cohane, LCSW creating connections and strengthening families by providing developmental-behavioral interventions and psychotherapy services Cohane@... From: sList [mailto:sList ] On Behalf Of Cislo Sent: Tuesday, January 26, 2010 8:59 PM To: sList Subject: Re: Feedback on meds > > Have you seen any success with the use of these products? > Cohane, LCSW > > Probiotics, absolutely. Immune and GI in general--patients, self, family, family dog, Melatonin, does not work on me, does on my husband, works some on my son, yes on most of my patients. Glutathione, gave a small temporary improvement my child. At the time he got it, it was only avail IV, expensive, noxious and a pain to go get. Have not tried the topicals or the nebulized, although a doc I know uses the nebulized personally. We now use SAM-e, which is a precursor, and that works. We use a lot. He is bipolar, and we were concerned (it has been shown to cause mania in bipolars, but no knowing if they have had cell lipids corrected first with omega 3's. His have been, so we tried it. Increased slowly and no mania at all. Helps joint inflammation and depression, as well as liver detox. If you are worried about liver detox, then ask your doc if you should also be giving milk thistle and Co-Q-10 (or ubiquinone). LDN--tried it for myself and my son, did not do much for either ( both for spectrum issues, and for an autoimmune arthritis). I may try it again. Have not used it for patients yet. No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 8.5.432 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/2644 - Release Date: 01/26/10 07:46:00 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 27, 2010 Report Share Posted January 27, 2010 I am on the spectrum myself, as is my husband. My son is Aspie, bipolar, psoriatic arthritis and a half a dozen other diagnoses. I am also a pediatrician, originally very traditional western medicine. Have become much better educated when I got tired of " learn to live with it " or seeing my colleagues a dozen medicines that contradict each other with little thought of the side effects. I have been to DAN! doc courses. I suggest that unless there is compelling reason to do so, that multiple treatments not be added at the same time. These things are pricy. If it does not work, it is not worth the cost. It is not a matter of not wanting to spend on your kid, it is that if you have a pool of X amount of dollars and you waste it on treatments that do not work, there will not be money to try treatments that might. Many treatments work for some kids and not for others. Each of us has a metabolism that is stressed at different combinations of places based on their genetics and environmental exposure, and so much of the search is for what combination of things work for your child. You can play odds of what works for most of them, but that is no guarantee it will work for you. It does not matter that many parents report help from a diet. If that is not your problem, it will not help you. And continuing to use something that did not help after a reasonable trial takes money away from trying the next intervention. If you start everything at once, you do not know what helps, or what is causing side effects and needs to stop, unless you take them away again, one at a time and see what changes. For instance, if I have to start three meds at the same time, and there is an improvement, I can then stop one of them and see if the patient gets worse again. But much more confusing that way. Meds vs. diet first? Depends on how desperate you are. If your kid is going to crash imminently, you may not have time to try diet. You may have to start meds, stabilize, add diet and then dial back meds. If you have wiggle room, changing diet makes much more sense than starting meds. This is the common sense approach, similar to how medicine approaches disease in general. If you are early high blood pressure, heart disease, diabetes, etc., change diet, exercise, lose weight. If you are desperately out of whack and about to need hospitalization, start meds, change lifestyle, decrease meds as lifestyle change improves your metabolism. I did indeed have us on a GFCF diet and it helped. A lot. But then we were going to move across country (a week) with a large truck towing a car trailer. How do you keep the diet that way? So my new husband suggested a Chinese herbal medicine used to stabilize guts during a cholera epidemic. My son was better on that than he had been on the diet. So we put him on regular food with the herbal med. And stayed there. Right now, I would like to try the diet again to see if anything changes, but he is 19 and 6'5 " and does not want to. You have a good start with the probiotics, and the recommendations your doc has made so far are reasonable and reasoned. It is overwhelming, I am constantly amazed at how together the parents on this list and others are, doing things I never thought of for their child. Your feelings are normal. I have them too. One step at a time. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 27, 2010 Report Share Posted January 27, 2010 I am on the spectrum myself, as is my husband. My son is Aspie, bipolar, psoriatic arthritis and a half a dozen other diagnoses. I am also a pediatrician, originally very traditional western medicine. Have become much better educated when I got tired of " learn to live with it " or seeing my colleagues a dozen medicines that contradict each other with little thought of the side effects. I have been to DAN! doc courses. I suggest that unless there is compelling reason to do so, that multiple treatments not be added at the same time. These things are pricy. If it does not work, it is not worth the cost. It is not a matter of not wanting to spend on your kid, it is that if you have a pool of X amount of dollars and you waste it on treatments that do not work, there will not be money to try treatments that might. Many treatments work for some kids and not for others. Each of us has a metabolism that is stressed at different combinations of places based on their genetics and environmental exposure, and so much of the search is for what combination of things work for your child. You can play odds of what works for most of them, but that is no guarantee it will work for you. It does not matter that many parents report help from a diet. If that is not your problem, it will not help you. And continuing to use something that did not help after a reasonable trial takes money away from trying the next intervention. If you start everything at once, you do not know what helps, or what is causing side effects and needs to stop, unless you take them away again, one at a time and see what changes. For instance, if I have to start three meds at the same time, and there is an improvement, I can then stop one of them and see if the patient gets worse again. But much more confusing that way. Meds vs. diet first? Depends on how desperate you are. If your kid is going to crash imminently, you may not have time to try diet. You may have to start meds, stabilize, add diet and then dial back meds. If you have wiggle room, changing diet makes much more sense than starting meds. This is the common sense approach, similar to how medicine approaches disease in general. If you are early high blood pressure, heart disease, diabetes, etc., change diet, exercise, lose weight. If you are desperately out of whack and about to need hospitalization, start meds, change lifestyle, decrease meds as lifestyle change improves your metabolism. I did indeed have us on a GFCF diet and it helped. A lot. But then we were going to move across country (a week) with a large truck towing a car trailer. How do you keep the diet that way? So my new husband suggested a Chinese herbal medicine used to stabilize guts during a cholera epidemic. My son was better on that than he had been on the diet. So we put him on regular food with the herbal med. And stayed there. Right now, I would like to try the diet again to see if anything changes, but he is 19 and 6'5 " and does not want to. You have a good start with the probiotics, and the recommendations your doc has made so far are reasonable and reasoned. It is overwhelming, I am constantly amazed at how together the parents on this list and others are, doing things I never thought of for their child. Your feelings are normal. I have them too. One step at a time. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 27, 2010 Report Share Posted January 27, 2010 I am on the spectrum myself, as is my husband. My son is Aspie, bipolar, psoriatic arthritis and a half a dozen other diagnoses. I am also a pediatrician, originally very traditional western medicine. Have become much better educated when I got tired of " learn to live with it " or seeing my colleagues a dozen medicines that contradict each other with little thought of the side effects. I have been to DAN! doc courses. I suggest that unless there is compelling reason to do so, that multiple treatments not be added at the same time. These things are pricy. If it does not work, it is not worth the cost. It is not a matter of not wanting to spend on your kid, it is that if you have a pool of X amount of dollars and you waste it on treatments that do not work, there will not be money to try treatments that might. Many treatments work for some kids and not for others. Each of us has a metabolism that is stressed at different combinations of places based on their genetics and environmental exposure, and so much of the search is for what combination of things work for your child. You can play odds of what works for most of them, but that is no guarantee it will work for you. It does not matter that many parents report help from a diet. If that is not your problem, it will not help you. And continuing to use something that did not help after a reasonable trial takes money away from trying the next intervention. If you start everything at once, you do not know what helps, or what is causing side effects and needs to stop, unless you take them away again, one at a time and see what changes. For instance, if I have to start three meds at the same time, and there is an improvement, I can then stop one of them and see if the patient gets worse again. But much more confusing that way. Meds vs. diet first? Depends on how desperate you are. If your kid is going to crash imminently, you may not have time to try diet. You may have to start meds, stabilize, add diet and then dial back meds. If you have wiggle room, changing diet makes much more sense than starting meds. This is the common sense approach, similar to how medicine approaches disease in general. If you are early high blood pressure, heart disease, diabetes, etc., change diet, exercise, lose weight. If you are desperately out of whack and about to need hospitalization, start meds, change lifestyle, decrease meds as lifestyle change improves your metabolism. I did indeed have us on a GFCF diet and it helped. A lot. But then we were going to move across country (a week) with a large truck towing a car trailer. How do you keep the diet that way? So my new husband suggested a Chinese herbal medicine used to stabilize guts during a cholera epidemic. My son was better on that than he had been on the diet. So we put him on regular food with the herbal med. And stayed there. Right now, I would like to try the diet again to see if anything changes, but he is 19 and 6'5 " and does not want to. You have a good start with the probiotics, and the recommendations your doc has made so far are reasonable and reasoned. It is overwhelming, I am constantly amazed at how together the parents on this list and others are, doing things I never thought of for their child. Your feelings are normal. I have them too. One step at a time. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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