The *boo!* part is how this place is about an hour across town from our house. And that we'd already had a week full of appointments (including a doctor that morning) so everyone was buggered and over offices and prodding and poking (and having to take the three year old, who, despite her love of doctors, has a limit).
Anyhoo, we made it in one peice, woke up Snail's extremely grumpy sister, and headed in. All this modification takes time, coz they literally have to heat them up and shape the plastic, so we were there for over an hour. Everyone got bored and shitty, even the kids.
Snail says "really..." |
Snail and her funny little feets! |
Thank the gods they had DORA! |
Snail is very bendy, sore, and tired, and Lolly watches DORA! |
I bribe everyone into a good mood on the way home with "Old MacDonalds." (photo by Lolly). |
The equipment itself, may be paid for by insurance. Maybe. We usually have to put it under a kind of "miscellaneous" heading, but they did pay for her last few pairs. But not any consultation or re-fit, or adjustment. I'm sorry, what?
Basically, I can go get a candle wafted over me by anyone with a tafe course under their belt and get it paid for, I can get sports shoes (for a "healthier lifestyle"), but I can't get prescription orthotics for my profoundly disabled child, coz that's not...what...extra enough? Medical? Has anyone in insurance ever seen them? FFS, people!! My insurance covers acupuncture, chiropractic, massage, aromatherapy (!!), reiki (!), or kinesiology, but not orthotics. I nearly blew a lobe. I'm writing angry emails.
At least the child's orthotics fit her (kind of) again. And we had chips. Calm. Blue. Ocean.
2 comments:
So frustrating -- and I hope it works out.
I've never asked you this before, but does Snail have a diagnosis?
She sure does, pachygyria, a brain malformation. Whether genetic or congenital, we haven't gone the genetic testing route as yet - it's on my list! The pachy causes her seizures, and her cerebral palsy.
xo
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