CLINICAL DIRECTOR & BEHAVIOUR CONSULTANT (She/Her)
Medical procedure anxiety and dental fear can make healthcare appointments extremely stressful for children and families. Blood tests, dental visits, immunisations, scans, and specialist appointments often involve unfamiliar sensations, uncertainty, discomfort, or previous negative experiences. For some children, particularly those with higher support needs, even entering a clinic can feel overwhelming.
Many routine medical appointments, such as dental cleanings, blood tests, immunisations, or specialist check-ups, can feel unpleasant even under the best circumstances. Most adults can relate to putting these appointments off for as long as possible, despite knowing how important they are.
For parents of children with higher support needs, these experiences can feel even more overwhelming. A child may not understand why the procedure is necessary, may struggle to tolerate discomfort or unfamiliar sensations, or may remember a previous experience as confusing or frightening. After one difficult appointment, it’s understandable that a child may never want to return.
Unfortunately, long wait times for appointments can add another layer of stress. Families may wait weeks or even months for an appointment, only to arrive on the day and find their child does not yet have the coping skills needed to manage the experience. This can sometimes lead to cancelled appointments, reliance on sedation, or missed opportunities for important healthcare.
When children are unable to access appropriate medical care, it can increase the likelihood of ongoing health concerns, misdiagnosis, unnecessary medication, avoidable side effects, hospitalisation, and poorer long-term health outcomes. It’s a frustrating cycle for families and professionals alike, and one that often leaves children in discomfort or distress unnecessarily.
In Australia, every person has the right to access healthcare regardless of age, disability, race, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, religion, or any other personal characteristic. These rights apply across all healthcare settings, including public and private hospitals, general practices, dental clinics, specialist services, community health centres, and allied health services.
However, not all healthcare providers, including doctors, dentists, and nurses, have the time, training, or resources to fully support children who experience significant anxiety around medical procedures. This is where allied health professionals, such as behaviour analysts and psychologists, can play an important role.
At Super Kids, we support children and families through approaches such as desensitisation and shaping. Desensitisation involves gradually reducing fear responses by helping a child build trust, predictability, confidence, and tolerance toward experiences that previously felt scary or overwhelming.
Rather than expecting a child to “just cope,” we work collaboratively with families and medical professionals to create a supportive, step-by-step plan that builds confidence over time.
Every child is different, so support plans are individualised based on their needs, communication style, sensory profile, and fears.
The first step is helping children feel safe and supported. We often begin by introducing predictable language and routines, so there are “no surprises.” A common approach is “tell, show, do,” where each step is explained, demonstrated, and then completed together.
Depending on the procedure, we may teach or model strategies such as:
Our goal is to help children feel more in control and develop trust in both the process and the people supporting them.
We also work to identify each child’s individual “fear hierarchy.” This means breaking down the entire medical experience into smaller steps to understand exactly what feels difficult.
For some children, simply walking into the clinic may feel overwhelming. Others may struggle with:
Once we understand where the anxiety is occurring, we can support those individual steps rather than expecting the child to manage the entire experience all at once.
From there, we use gradual, incremental exposure to help build confidence over time. We always start with the most achievable step and move forward at the child’s pace.
This process may include:
For some children, treatment may also need to be broken into shorter or more manageable sessions in collaboration with the medical team.
The goal is not simply to “get through” one appointment. It is to help children develop lifelong skills, confidence, self-advocacy, and positive healthcare experiences.
If you are a parent seeking support for your child to access medical or dental care, or a healthcare professional wanting additional support for a client, we would love to work collaboratively with you.
If you are interested in learning about events or how Super Kids can help you, please fill out some information and we will be in touch shortly.
Super Kids acknowledges each individual’s personal preference to use identity-first or person-first language to describe themselves or their loved one. We interchangeably use both language conventions and therefore refer to both Autistic children and children with Autism.