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General Parenting
New. And scared
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<blockquote data-quote="SRL" data-source="post: 433737" data-attributes="member: 701"><p>Hi Kalli, welcome to our forum. Sorry you've had to find us, but I hope you'll find good help and encouragement here. </p><p> </p><p>I'll second Beth's suggestion of remaining on top of things diagnosis-wise by redoing the assessments down the road, or possibly seeking another opinion. Standalone ODD is not typical, but since this may be stemming from a brain injury, it's not what we're used to seeing.</p><p> </p><p>Sorry, we can't offer you a crystal ball and tell you that things will get better. Usually they do, as parents get more information about their child through assessments, find strategies and treatments that work, and the child matures. Most of the time it's a combination of the child improving and us parents learning to live with a game plan that was way different than we thought we signed up for.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SRL, post: 433737, member: 701"] Hi Kalli, welcome to our forum. Sorry you've had to find us, but I hope you'll find good help and encouragement here. I'll second Beth's suggestion of remaining on top of things diagnosis-wise by redoing the assessments down the road, or possibly seeking another opinion. Standalone ODD is not typical, but since this may be stemming from a brain injury, it's not what we're used to seeing. Sorry, we can't offer you a crystal ball and tell you that things will get better. Usually they do, as parents get more information about their child through assessments, find strategies and treatments that work, and the child matures. Most of the time it's a combination of the child improving and us parents learning to live with a game plan that was way different than we thought we signed up for. [/QUOTE]
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