April, I feel for you.
Some medical practitioners don't have a clue about the needs of autistic kids..... it's up to us parents to educate them, it seems!
Example: Billy broke his wrist 4 weeks ago. He was a real trooper through the splinting and the casting; probably because having the cast applied was like deep pressure, which he enjoys. Plus, immobilizing a fracture always makes it feel better.
My real concern came yesterday when it was time for the cast to
come off. The physician's assistant comes in and I tell her that he is autistic and very hypersensitive to loud noise and anything metal near his skin.
(Clipping his nails and getting his hair cut are dreadful ordeals. He hates it.)
She says to him, "Oh, it just makes a loud noise like a vacuum cleaner, it doesn't hurt!", as she takes out the "saw" to begin removing the cast. I had to stop her and explain further.
"He is
autistic. He is
hypersensitive to the noise. He is nine years old and he cannot stay in the room when I vacuum because the noise
hurts his ears. The vibrations of the saw
hurt; he feels pain when neuro-typical children just feel the vibrations. You will need to work fast and let his father and I hold him down."
She looked at me like I had two heads.
Well, the saw began buzzing and of course, you could hear Billy's screams all the way out to the waiting room.
She struggled to remove the cast quickly. "Hold still, Buddy,
it doesn't hurt!" What, are you
deaf or something??
It does hurt, he is hyper-sensitive! Sometimes, I just don't know.
Follow your instincts and do what you think is best for Hunter...I'm sending you

so it all works out happily.
Kathy