Boy all but blind after tumour not picked up
Dubby Henry
A 6-year-old boy was diagnosed with lazy eye and prescribed glasses by his optometrist — but within a year was almost blind due to a previously undiagnosed brain tumour.
Deputy Health and Disability Commissioner Meenal Duggal yesterday released a report, finding the nowretired optometrist in breach of the Code of Health and Disability Services Consumers’ Rights over the case.
When the boy visited the optometrist in 2014 it was recorded as a routine visit, Duggal said.
The optometrist recorded the boy’s visual acuity in the left eye as “6/10” and in the right eye as “6/x”, which meant he was unable to identify letters on the Snellen chart at six metres with his right eye.
The boy was diagnosed with lazy eye (amblyopia) and possible righteye misalignment (exotropia), and prescribed glasses. The optometrist did not test for any pathologies or refer the boy for further testing, despite later telling the commission that would have been his normal practice.
No follow-up assessments were noted and the commissioner’s report found the optometrist’s failures would have met with “severe” peer disapproval.
Fourteen months later, the usually friendly, chatty boy had developed a severe headache and was having increasing vision problems. He was unable to walk straight, had started rubbing his forehead and banging his head against the wall, couldn’t see or read and was barely talking.
The GP sent him to hospital, where a CT scan found a craniopharyngioma, a type of brain tumour. A week later the boy had surgery to remove the tumour. After the surgery, he was completely blind in his right eye and had very poor vision in his left.
Duggal said the optometrist had failed the boy in several ways. He should have taken steps to test the boy’s vision in his right eye, and considered differential diagnoses before deciding on the diagnosis.
He also had poor record keeping, did not make an appropriate referral or institute an ongoing treatment plan, and he did not schedule regular assessments to see if the boy’s vision was getting better.
The optometrist’s practice — which he owned — was also found liable for the inadequate care provided, among other failings. Duggal recommended the practice take steps to educate staff and review its processes.
He recommended that the optometrist apologise for his breach of the Code of Health.
The optometrist, who retired in 2015, said he apologised “profusely” to the family and was “profoundly regretful”.
He had “contemplated and agonised” over why he misdiagnosed the boy’s eyesight problem.
Duggal recommended the Optometrists and Dispensing Opticians Board might want to review his competence if he returned to clinical practice.