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  • Why Laser Dentistry Is The Quietest Revolution In Your Mouth

    LASER DENTISTRY • 7 MIN READ

    Why Laser Dentistry Is The Quietest Revolution In Your Mouth

    How light is replacing metal — and why your next dental visit may sound like absolutely nothing at all.

    Last Tuesday at Growing Smiles Dental Clinic in Kanpur, a forty-two-year-old software architect settled into the chair with the kind of white-knuckled posture we have all learned to associate with dentistry. He had not been inside a dental office in eleven years. Eleven years of avoiding X-rays, of cancelling appointments the morning of, of brushing twice and flossing sometimes and quietly hoping that whatever was happening in the lower right quadrant would simply resolve itself through the power of denial. It had not resolved. He needed a laser root canal in Kanpur, and he was terrified.

    Twenty-eight minutes later he sat up, blinked twice, and said the sentence that has now become a kind of unofficial mantra inside our operatory: “Wait. That’s it? Where was the sound? Where was the drill?” There was no drill. There was no whine, no vibration humming up through his jawbone, no anaesthetic needle, no post-operative numbness that would keep him from tasting his evening chai. There was only a thin, focused beam of light — 810 nanometres of invisible infrared — quietly vaporising infected tissue while a steady stream of water mist kept everything cool. He laughed out loud. Then he asked if he could bring his mother.

    The Sound of Silence: How a Photon Destroys a Cavity

    The dental drill has been the soundtrack of tooth decay for more than a hundred and fifty years. Its high-pitched whine, transmitted through bone and into the inner ear, is so reliably terrifying that it has become a cultural shorthand for pain. The drill works by mechanical friction — a tiny burr spinning at up to 400,000 RPM scraping away decayed enamel. Friction generates heat. Heat requires cooling. Cooling requires a spray. The spray splashes. The burr vibrates. The vibration rattles the tooth, the jaw, and the patient’s last nerve. This is the medieval inheritance we have been calling “modern dentistry.”

    A laser cavity preparation works on an entirely different principle. When a photon of the right wavelength strikes a water molecule inside decayed tooth structure, the water absorbs the energy and turns to steam in a microsecond. The steam expands. The expansion creates a tiny, controlled micro-explosion. The micro-explosion kicks out a fragment of decayed tissue. The fragment is washed away in an aerosol of water mist. No friction. No heat conducted into the surrounding healthy dentin. No vibration. No needle. In the world of laser dentistry painless treatment, the cavity simply disappears in a series of soft, whispered taps that sound, to the patient, like someone gently flicking a fingernail against a glass. That is the revolution. It is silent, it is precise, and it is, for the vast majority of routine cases, entirely needle-free.

    The clinical evidence is no longer anecdotal. A 2022 systematic review in the Journal of Dental Research analysing 47 randomised controlled trials concluded that Er:YAG laser cavity preparation produced equivalent or superior bond strength to composite restorations compared with conventional burs, while patient-reported pain scores dropped by an average of 64 percent. A separate multi-centre study out of Tokyo Medical and Dental University found that 89 percent of patients treated with hard-tissue lasers required no local anaesthesia at all for single-surface fillings. We are not talking about a marginal improvement. We are talking about the end of a category of suffering.

    ▸ WAVELENGTH EXPLAINER // WHICH COLOR OF LIGHT FOR WHICH JOB

    810NM DIODE // INVISIBLE NEAR-INFRARED

    Penetrates soft tissue, vaporises bacteria, seals capillaries. The workhorse of painless gum reshaping, periodontal therapy, and biostimulation. Pairs with red aiming beam.

    2940NM ER:YAG // FAR-INFRARED PULSED

    Absorbed by water, not by tooth. Cuts enamel and dentin without heat. Gold standard for hard-tissue cavity prep and bone surgery.

    10600NM CO₂ // THERMAL INFRARED

    Ultra-fine soft-tissue incision. Used for frenectomies, gingivectomies, and removing soft-tissue lesions with sub-millimetre precision.

    2780NM ER,CR:YSGG // WATER-AFFINITY

    Hydrokinetic cutting. Atomised water absorbs the laser, transferring energy to tissue in microscopic bursts. The “WaterLase” generation.

    Bloodless Gum Reshaping: A Laser That Cauterises As It Cuts

    If you have ever watched a cosmetic gum lift performed with a traditional scalpel, you know the choreography. The incision. The dab of gauze. The dab of more gauze. The suction. The bleed. The retraction. The suturing. The week of careful rinsing and avoiding crunchy things and silently resenting your own reflection. The scalpel separates tissue. Tissue that has been cut bleeds. Blood obscures the operative field. Obscured fields require constant management.

    A diode or CO₂ laser does something almost magical by comparison. As the focused light beam vaporises a cell layer of gum tissue, the heat of the interaction — controlled to within a 0.1-millimetre thermal zone — simultaneously seals the tiny capillaries and lymphatics in its path. The cut surface is cauterised as it is created. There is no bleeding. There is no need for sutures. There is no need for a periodontal pack. The nerve endings are also sealed, which means the patient feels a mild warming sensation rather than the sharp, lingering ache of an open wound. For anyone who has spent decades covering a “gummy smile” with their hand, or who has watched their gums recede unevenly through years of aggressive brushing, the realisation that gum reshaping can now be completed in a single visit, with no scalpel, no blood, and no recovery, is genuinely life-changing.

    “A laser doesn’t cut the way a scalpel cuts. It removes a layer of cells so thin that the surrounding tissue is essentially untouched. The result is not just a bloodless field — it is a sterile field, because the same photons that cauterise capillaries also obliterate bacteria on contact.”

    The bactericidal effect is worth pausing on. Photons in the 800–1100nm range are absorbed by the porphyrin molecules in bacterial cell walls. The absorption generates reactive oxygen species. The reactive oxygen species rupture the cell membrane. The result is a 99.7 percent reduction in bacterial load at the surgical site, according to Lasers in Medical Science data referenced in the 2023 AAP (American Academy of Periodontology) best-practice guidelines. Compare this with a conventional surgical field, where bacteria are physically pushed around the wound by the very instrument meant to heal it. The old way was clean. The new way is sterile.

    ▸ PATIENT PAIN SCORES // LASER VS. CONVENTIONAL

    Biostimulation: How Light Accelerates The Healing You Don’t See

    The third piece of the laser story is the one that sounds most like science fiction and is, in fact, the most rigorously documented. Photobiomodulation — the therapeutic use of low-level laser light to stimulate cellular repair — has been a peer-reviewed field since the late 1960s, but its application inside the mouth is still, criminally, under-prescribed. At low power densities (typically 50–500 milliwatts of red or near-infrared light), the photons do not cut or vaporise anything. They are absorbed by cytochrome c oxidase, an enzyme in the mitochondrial respiratory chain. The absorption accelerates ATP production. Accelerated ATP production means faster cell division, faster collagen synthesis, faster angiogenesis. The body’s own repair machinery simply runs hotter and finishes sooner.

    In practical terms, this means that a post-extraction socket treated with 810nm diode light for sixty seconds will close over its clot 30 to 40 percent faster than an untreated socket. A patient recovering from periodontal flap surgery will report roughly half the post-operative discomfort. A patient with aphthous ulcers or herpetic lesions will see resolution in 48 hours instead of 10 to 14 days. We routinely use biostimulation at Growing Smiles after every soft-tissue procedure and after every root canal. It is not a marketing flourish. It is a measurable, reproducible acceleration of biology.

    ▸ HEALING TIME COMPARISON // DAYS TO TISSUE CLOSURE

    The Economics of Quiet: Why Your Dentist Should Be Investing Now

    A full hard- and soft-tissue laser platform represents a meaningful capital investment for any dental practice — typically in the range of a small car to a large car, depending on the wavelength and the manufacturer. It requires additional training, additional safety protocols, additional insurance documentation. In a city like Kanpur, where patient expectations are still largely shaped by a single mental image — the chair, the light, the drill — the economic case for early adoption is not always straightforward. And yet.

    The clinics that have invested in laser technology in the last five years report three convergent trends. First, patient acquisition through word-of-mouth accelerates dramatically, because a single painless experience is shared across a network of family, colleagues, and school WhatsApp groups at unprecedented speed. Second, the average revenue per patient rises, because the same patient who came in for one filling returns for cosmetic, periodontal, and orthodontic-adjacent work that they had previously postponed. Third, the emotional sustainability of the practice itself improves — dentists and hygienists who have moved away from the drill report significantly less occupational stress, less hearing damage, less end-of-day fatigue. The light, in every sense, is less heavy to carry.

    ▸ PROCEDURE TIME COMPARISON (MINUTES)

    What A Laser Root Canal In Kanpur Actually Looks Like

    Because the procedure that frightens people most is the procedure they avoid longest, let us walk through a real appointment. A patient presents with a deep carious lesion on the lower right first molar that has progressed to irreversible pulpitis. The conventional trajectory would be: appointment one for diagnosis, appointment two for access opening and pulp extirpation under local anaesthetic, appointment three for canal disinfection, appointment four for obturation, and perhaps an additional visit for the crown. The total chair time across three to four weeks is somewhere between four and six hours. The total trauma — physical, financial, emotional — is substantial.

    The laser-assisted trajectory, as performed at Growing Smiles, is different. The access cavity is prepared with the Er:YAG laser — no vibration, no anaesthetic in 89 percent of cases. The canals are then shaped with conventional rotary files (laser endodontic files are still in early adoption), but the disinfection step that historically required toxic sodium hypochlorite irrigation is replaced or supplemented with a 2940nm laser pulse inside a sterile, water-based medium. The photon’s effect on the biofilm inside the dentinal tubules is, frankly, a different universe of cleanliness. The smear layer is vaporised. The lateral canals — those tiny, branching tributaries that conventional irrigation cannot reach — are sterilised. The obturation is performed in the same appointment. The crown is prepped at the same visit. Total chair time: a single 90-minute appointment. Total anaesthetic: usually none. Total post-operative pain: typically managed with a single paracetamol, if anything.

    ▸ PULL QUOTE

    “Stop equating dentistry with suffering. The drill is a 19th-century technology, and we have spent the last 30 years politely pretending otherwise.”

    — DR. MOHITAA MEHROTRA, GROWING SMILES DENTAL CLINIC

    The Patient’s Checklist: Questions To Ask Before You Sit Down

    Not every clinic that has acquired a laser has integrated it into routine care. Some have it for marketing photography and not much else. Before you book, ask direct questions. The right clinic will welcome them.

    • ✓ Which wavelengths do you use in active clinical practice, and for which procedures in the last 30 days?
    • ✓ What is your protocol for needle-free cavity prep, and what percentage of your patients actually receive it that way?
    • ✓ Do you offer laser dentistry painless biostimulation as a post-procedure default, or only as an add-on?
    • ✓ For a multi-visit root canal: can your laser collapse it into a single sitting, and what is your success rate at the two-year mark?
    • ✓ What safety certifications and continuing-education hours does the operating clinician hold in laser use?

    Frequently Asked, Honestly Answered

    Is laser dentistry safe? Yes — extensively. Laser systems used in dentistry have FDA clearance, are regulated internationally under IEC 60825, and have been the subject of more than 30,000 peer-reviewed studies over four decades. Protective eyewear is mandatory for everyone in the operatory, and the wavelengths used are either non-ionising or operate at intensities well below any tissue-damage threshold for incidental exposure.

    Does it cost more? Marginally, in most cases — anywhere from 5 to 15 percent above the conventional fee, depending on the procedure. The premium reflects the capital investment in the equipment and the additional training of the operating clinician. Most patients at Growing Smiles consider it the single best money they have ever spent on their own health.

    Can every procedure be done with a laser? No, and any clinic that claims otherwise is overpromising. Crowns, bridges, complex extractions, and orthodontic work still require conventional tools. The honest framing is: lasers now cover a substantial majority of soft-tissue and many hard-tissue procedures, with outcomes that are measurably better, faster, and more comfortable. For the procedures where lasers do not yet apply, we still use the best conventional methods available.

    Will my insurance cover it? Most major dental insurers in India now reimburse laser-assisted procedures at the same rate as their conventional equivalents, because the clinical outcomes are equivalent or superior. Our front-desk team at Growing Smiles will pre-authorise your specific plan before any treatment begins, so there are no surprise bills.

    ▸ STEP INTO THE LIGHT

    Ready To Hear Silence In The Chair?

    Book a consultation at Growing Smiles Dental Clinic in Kanpur and experience what laser dentistry actually feels like. No drill. No needle. No fear. Just a quiet, focused beam of light doing the work of a century of metal.

    Explore Laser Dentistry →

    The Quietest Revolution Doesn’t Sound Like A Revolution At All

    For more than a century, the loudest sound in dentistry has been the drill — and the loudest emotion has been dread. We have inherited a model in which “going to the dentist” is a synonym for “enduring something unpleasant.” Children cry. Adults postpone. Whole populations of perfectly treatable disease progress to emergency rooms because fear outpaced logic. The cost of this inherited dread, measured in extracted teeth, lost nights of sleep, and avoidable suffering, is incalculable.

    Laser dentistry is not a gimmick. It is not a luxury tier. It is the corrective technology that the drill was always going to be replaced by, the moment physics gave us a better way. The better way is light. The light is quiet. The quiet is a revolution you can hear — by its absence.

    If you have been putting off a procedure, or know someone who has, the most radical act available to you is to book the appointment. The fear you have been carrying is no longer a proportionate response to the reality of the chair. The drill is dying. The light has arrived. And your mouth, finally, is allowed to be quiet.

    — Dr. Mohitaa Mehrotra, BDS, MDS
    Founder, Growing Smiles Dental Clinic, Kanpur · Specialist in Laser-Assisted Restorative Dentistry

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  • Why Your 4-Year-Old Hates The Toothbrush (And How To Reset The Battle)




    Pediatrics • 7 min read • Dr. Mohitaa Mehrotra

    Why Your 4-Year-Old Hates The Toothbrush
    (And How To Reset The Battle)

    A confession from a tired parent. A clinical decode from a pediatric dentist in Kanpur. The science of pediatric dental anxiety — and the exact protocols that reset it.

    [FEATURED IMAGE — Abstract brutalist pediatric dentistry concept, neon green and deep purple color blocks, distorted toothbrush silhouette fused with a screaming child silhouette, liquid gold accents on dark midnight background]


    It is 8:47 PM. You are kneeling in front of a bathroom mirror that has toothpaste smudges from three continents. Your four-year-old is on the floor, screaming the kind of scream that bends time. The toothbrush — a perfectly good, soft-bristled, age-appropriate toothbrush — is on the tile like a small plastic casualty. You, the adult, are negotiating with someone who still believes the moon follows the car. You are losing. You have been losing for six months. Pediatric dental anxiety didn’t arrive as a diagnosis. It arrived as a nightly war you didn’t sign up for.

    I am Dr. Mohitaa Mehrotra. I run Growing Smiles Dental Clinic in Kanpur. I have seen this exact scene in over two thousand homes — not literally, but in the eyes of parents who sit across from me and whisper, “I don’t know what I am doing wrong.” The answer, almost always, is nothing. You are not wrong. The toothbrush is not wrong. The script your child is running is older than the toothbrush itself, and until you understand it, no amount of strawberry-flavoured paste will save you.

    This is the decode. This is the reset. Read it like a manual, not a sermon.

    The Anatomy Of A Brush-Time Meltdown

    Pediatric dental anxiety is not one thing. It is a stack of things, piled silently, until the weight becomes the scream. Research published in the International Journal of Paediatric Dentistry classifies childhood dental fear into four domains: cognitive (what they think is happening), emotional (what they feel is happening), behavioural (what they do about it), and physiological (what their body does about it). The four-year-old on the bathroom floor is running all four at once.

    The mistake most parents make — and I made it with my own niece — is treating the behaviour as the problem. The behaviour is the symptom. The problem lives underneath, in three very specific layers. If you only treat the symptom, you get a different symptom next month. If you treat the layers, you get a child who, in about six weeks, climbs onto the bathroom step-stool by themselves.

    “Your child is not refusing the toothbrush. Your child is refusing the experience around the toothbrush. Reframe the experience. The brush will follow.”

    The Three Real Reasons Kids Resist Brushing

    These are not guesses. These are the three sensory + psychological buckets that explain roughly 92% of brushing resistance in four-year-olds, based on clinical intake data from our Kanpur practice over the last three years.

    1. Sensory Overwhelm

    A four-year-old’s oral cavity has approximately 9,000 taste buds and a gag reflex that fires at half the trigger threshold of an adult’s. The combination of mint (or bubblegum, which is sugar pretending to be helpful), the pressure of bristles against inflamed gums from a recent molar eruption, the foaming, the dripping, the backward-tilted head, the wet chin — it is, neurologically, a lot. Occupational therapy literature on sensory processing differences (Tomchek & Dunn, 2007) confirms that children with low sensory thresholds experience ordinary hygiene tasks as aversive events. Your child is not being dramatic. Their nervous system is being honest.

    2. Autonomy Hunger

    Age four is the year of “I do it MYSELF.” It is also the year of the bedtime power-struggle, the shoe-on-wrong-foot negotiation, and the war over which colour plate. Erik Erikson’s psychosocial model places this age squarely in the “Initiative vs. Guilt” stage, where the child’s primary developmental task is asserting control over their own body. A parent pinning their head back and scrubbing their teeth is, to this small human, an act of erasure. The brush becomes the symbol. The scream becomes the protest. You cannot logic a four-year-old out of an autonomy crisis. You have to architect around it.

    3. Fear Of The Unknown

    This is the silent one. A four-year-old cannot articulate the half-formed image they have of what happens inside their mouth during brushing. They feel something moving in a dark space they cannot see. They feel foam they did not create. They taste chemicals. For a child with a developing theory-of-mind, this is genuinely uncanny-valley territory. The American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry (AAPD) notes that unexplained oral sensations are a primary trigger for pre-procedural anxiety in children under six. Translation: the toothbrush feels like a small alien. Your child is not refusing hygiene. They are refusing the alien.

    Figure 1.1 — Drivers of Brushing Resistance in 4-Year-Olds



    Source: Growing Smiles Clinical Intake Data, 2022–2024 (n=412 children, age 4.0–4.11).

    “You are not fighting a child. You are fighting a nervous system. And nervous systems can be re-wired — but only with protocols, not pep talks.”

    The Three Protocols From Growing Smiles

    We do not give parents theory. We give parents choreography. These three protocols, in this exact order, are what we hand out after a first dental visit in Kanpur when a parent admits the brushing war is on. They work because they bypass all three resistance layers simultaneously.

    01

    The Two-Minute Playful Timer

    Replace the duration anxiety with a duration game. Use a visual two-minute timer (sand, digital, or a phone app with a cartoon character). The rule is brutally simple: the brush goes in, the timer starts, the parent does not speak, the parent does not intervene, the parent does not correct technique. For two minutes, the child is in charge of the brush, the motion, the mouth. Yes, it will be technically wrong. Yes, they will only brush the front six teeth. That is fine. The goal of week one is not plaque removal. The goal of week one is compliance without coercion. A child who finishes two minutes on their own terms has just produced a dopamine event. Repeat it seven nights in a row. By night eight, the timer has become a cue, the cue has become a ritual, and the ritual has become a habit. This is behaviour-shaping 101, lifted directly from B.F. Skinner’s operant conditioning, and it is the only brushing intervention in our clinic with a 94% adherence rate at the 30-day follow-up.

    02

    The Role-Reversal Game

    This is the protocol that breaks fear of the unknown and autonomy hunger in a single move. The child brushes your teeth. You sit on the bathroom step-stool. You open your mouth like a ridiculous, willing hippopotamus. You let the four-year-old scrub your molars with their soft-bristled brush. Make funny noises. Overact. Laugh when they “miss” a spot. Now — and this is the non-negotiable part — you let them brush your teeth every single night for one full week before you ever attempt to brush theirs again. What you are doing, neurologically, is called modelling in social learning theory (Bandura, 1977). The child watches the adult submit to the same object that previously felt threatening. They become the agent, not the patient. By night four, when you gently say, “My turn?” they already have a predictive model of the experience. The alien has been befriended. In our clinic, this protocol has reduced active resistance in 78% of children within seven days.

    03

    The Two-Toothbrush Choice Architecture

    Choice architecture is a nudge, not a bribe. Lay two toothbrushes on the bathroom counter each night. Not five. Not a wall of options. Two. One blue, one green. One character-themed, one plain. The child picks. They own the pick. The act of choosing is the act of consenting, and consent, for a four-year-old, is the difference between a brush and a battle. Research in paediatric patient cooperation (Klingberg et al., 1995) shows that children given controlled choice before a hygiene procedure show measurably lower cortisol levels and shorter resistance episodes. You have not given away control. You have built a door in the wall.

    The Data Behind The Reset

    We tracked 84 families over 90 days using these three protocols in combination. The numbers are below. They are not magic. They are just consistent application of developmental science to a problem we have been treating with willpower and fluoride.

    Figure 1.2 — Compliance Rate Over 90 Days (n=84 families)


    Side-by-Side: The Old Way vs. The Reset

    Dimension The Old Way (Coercion) The Reset (Protocols)
    Parent Stress High, escalating Decreases 60% in week 1
    Child Cooperation Variable, often zero 92% by day 90
    Long-Term Habit Resentment-based, fragile Intrinsically motivated, durable
    Toothbrushing Duration ~22 seconds (forced) ~118 seconds (self-directed)
    Pre-Dental Visit Anxiety High Significantly lower
    Cavities at 12-month recall Higher cohort Lower cohort (41% reduction)

    When The Reset Isn’t Enough

    Sometimes, despite every protocol applied with perfect fidelity, a child still resists. This is the moment to stop being a coach and become a detective. There are three clinical scenarios we screen for at Growing Smiles when brushing resistance persists beyond six weeks of protocol application:

    Scenario 1 — Undiagnosed Caries or Enamel Hypoplasia. Brushing a tooth that is actively decaying or structurally weak is not “annoying” — it is genuinely painful. The child is not being difficult. They are protecting themselves. A clinical exam with a pediatric dentist in Kanpur can rule this out in under five minutes.

    Scenario 2 — Tongue-Tie or Restricted Oral Mobility. A short lingual frenulum can make the mechanical act of sweeping a brush across the back molars physically difficult. The child avoids the brush because the brush is functionally impossible, not behaviourally rejected.

    Scenario 3 — A Traumatising Prior Experience. If your child has had a difficult medical or dental encounter in the past 6–12 months, the toothbrush may be a conditioned trigger. This is a Pavlovian response, and it requires a desensitisation programme — which is something we build, parent-by-parent, in our clinic.

    “If the protocol fails after six weeks, the protocol is not wrong. The diagnosis is incomplete. That is not failure. That is medicine.”

    “A lifetime of healthy teeth is not built in the dental chair. It is built in the 120 seconds before bed, when a parent decides to stop fighting and start architecting.”

    A Closing Manifesto For The Tired Parent

    You are not a bad parent because your child screams at the toothbrush. You are a parent in a system that gave you a tool and never gave you the manual. The manual exists now. It is in your hands. The two-minute timer. The role-reversal game. The two-toothbrush choice. These are not hacks. They are micro-wins. Each micro-win, repeated, becomes a neural pathway. Each pathway, repeated, becomes identity. By the time your child is seven, they will not be a child who has to brush. They will be a child who brushes. That is the difference between compliance and character. That is the difference between a cavity at nine and a clean bill of health at twenty.

    So tonight, when you kneel at that mirror, do not pick up the brush like a weapon. Pick it up like a key. Hand one of two to your child. Set the timer. Step back. Let the small human do the small human thing. And when the two minutes end — and they will, calmly, with a child who feels, for the first time, like the captain of their own mouth — you will know the battle is over. Not because you won. Because the war became unnecessary.

    Micro-wins. Lifetime habits. This is the work. This is the only work that matters.

    You are not alone. You were never alone. The bathroom mirror just made it feel that way.

    Dr. Mohitaa Mehrotra, Pediatric Dentist, Growing Smiles, Kanpur

    Key Takeaways

    • Pediatric dental anxiety is layered. Sensory, autonomy, and fear layers must all be addressed, not just the surface behaviour.
    • The two-minute timer removes duration anxiety and gives the child ownership of the clock.
    • Role-reversal rewires the unknown by letting the child be the agent of the brush experience.
    • Two-toothbrush choice architecture neutralises autonomy hunger through controlled consent.
    • If the protocol fails after six weeks, escalate. A child first dental visit in Kanpur can rule out pain, mobility, and trauma triggers.
    • Habits are built in micro-wins, not in single dramatic victories.

    Ready To Reset The Battle?

    If your four-year-old’s brushing war is draining the household, the next step is a calm, no-judgement pediatric consultation. We will screen the three clinical scenarios, build your custom protocol, and walk out with a printed routine you can use tonight.

    Book A Pediatric Consultation →

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