Western Mail

Disabled teenager’s five-month wait with toothache ‘an outrage’

- BRIAN FARMER Press Associatio­n reporter newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

AJUDGE has raised concerns about delays in treating a severely disabled teenager thought to have had toothache for the best part of five months.

Mr Justice Hayden described the way the boy’s case had been handled as “little short of an outrage” and “indefensib­le”.

Bosses at the Cardiff and Vale University Health Board, in Cardiff, have apologised and say they will stage an internal inquiry.

The judge aired his concerns yesterday after analysing the boy’s case at a hearing in the Court of Protection, where issues relating to people who may lack the mental capacity to make decisions are considered, in London.

He said the boy could not be named in media reports of the case.

Mr Justice Hayden said the boy, who is severely autistic, could not communicat­e because of his disabiliti­es but had begun banging his head, sometimes against walls.

He said the head banging had started in October and his parents, one of whom is a mental health nurse, thought his behaviour was a response to toothache.

In November they had taken him to an A&E department because they thought he had concussion.

But health authority bosses had not asked a Court of Protection judge to decide what treatment was in the boy’s best interests until this week.

He said treatment was now planned but could not take place until early March.

Mr Justice Hayden, who is based in the Family Division of the High Court, said anyone who had suffered toothache would think waiting from now until early March for treatment was an “eternity”.

The judge suggested that the head banging could have caused a severe injury and led to the boy’s death.

Mr Justice Hayden said the boy had started banging his head in October and his parents had said they thought his behaviour was a response to toothache.

“It might seem obvious that some sort of dental examinatio­n was required,” said Mr Justice Hayden.

“Plainly it was. But an applicatio­n was not made (to the Court of Protection) until yesterday (Thursday).”

The judge said he had approved examinatio­n and treatment proposals. But he said that because the boy’s disabiliti­es required the involvemen­t of a number of different medical profession­als, the boy could not be treated until early March.

“For anybody who has had toothache, being delayed between now then looks like an eternity,” said Mr Justice Hayden.

“But this is a young man who, it seems, has been suffering for nearly five months. This is little short of an outrage. It is indefensib­le.”

Barrister Claire Watson, who led the health board’s legal team, said bosses wanted to apologise to the boy’s parents.

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