Go to doctor
An adult in a white coat will press on the stomach and ask where it hurts, questions that demand inward listening. The pictures below let the child rehearse the sequence calmly first.
♂Go to the doctor
A boy points towards a medical cross symbol with a path leading to it, indicating going to the doctor.
♀Go to the doctor
A girl walks towards a building with a red cross, symbolizing a hospital, clinic, or doctor.
About this visual support
Answering questions like where-does-it-hurt or since-when is hard mid-examination, even for adults. Add a stranger, a cold stethoscope and a waiting room of coughing people, and inward listening becomes almost impossible. The child needs the order first to give good answers.
Walk through the pictures calmly at home: check-in, waiting, weighing, conversation, listening to the heart, maybe the throat, maybe the ear. When each step has its own image, the visit becomes a list the child can follow with a finger, not unfamiliar terrain.
A concrete tip: ask the child to point to the picture that matches where it hurts, both at home and in the exam room. Pointing relieves the speech load and gives the doctor better information than a forced word. In Routined you can build the visit as a checklist with timers for waiting and save it for the next appointment. Try it free for 14 days.