taximomfor4
<font color=purple>Needs a few Ricola drops<br><fo
- Joined
- Jan 31, 2005
- Messages
- 4,671
My oldest dd's ortho teaches it at a really excellent college. He is adamantly opposed to the 2-phase thing. His admin assistant told me that in the 16 yrs she has worked for him, she has only seen him do a 2-phase treatment plan on TWO kids. Both were unable to speak properly and unable to eat some foods. He said that the second phase is rarely shorter by more than just a few months, so it is essentially not beneficial or cost-effective. Increased cost for meager benefit, in other words. I purposely seek out practitioners who don't overtreat, so we chose him, obviously. DD was meticulous with her rubber bands, etc, and so wore her braces for almost exactly 2 yrs. Would have been a little less, but she had one stubborn tooth, lol. While she had crowding, her worst issue was cross-bite.
My son has some speech issues due to tooth placement. This ortho saw him at age 8, and told us to return when all of his baby teeth have fallen out. So we will. Generally about age 12.
I say, don't just talk to orthodontists that do 2-phase treatment, find
one that doesn't do it for almost every single child they see and ask THEM advice, as well. Ask what the negative impact would be if you just waited and did one set of braces. Then YOU decide if the additional cost and inconvenience of 2-phase treatment is worth it to you.
My son has some speech issues due to tooth placement. This ortho saw him at age 8, and told us to return when all of his baby teeth have fallen out. So we will. Generally about age 12.
I say, don't just talk to orthodontists that do 2-phase treatment, find
one that doesn't do it for almost every single child they see and ask THEM advice, as well. Ask what the negative impact would be if you just waited and did one set of braces. Then YOU decide if the additional cost and inconvenience of 2-phase treatment is worth it to you.