Misdiagnosis of Child Abuse Related to Delay in Diagnosing a Paediatric Brain Tumour

Conflicting opinion regarding the relative weight that should be allocated to the investigation of organic causes of child illness, compared to the pursuit of suspicions of child abuse, has generated considerable public debate. The discourse of Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy/Fabricated and Induced Ill...

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Main Author: Lynne Wrennall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2008-01-01
Series:Clinical Medicine: Pediatrics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://la-press.com/article.php?article_id=803
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spelling doaj-eca1bca360ea4c01bb5a6771bd4041952020-11-24T21:12:53ZengSAGE PublishingClinical Medicine: Pediatrics1178-220X2008-01-011112Misdiagnosis of Child Abuse Related to Delay in Diagnosing a Paediatric Brain TumourLynne WrennallConflicting opinion regarding the relative weight that should be allocated to the investigation of organic causes of child illness, compared to the pursuit of suspicions of child abuse, has generated considerable public debate. The discourse of Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy/Fabricated and Induced Illness is at the centre of contention. In particular, concern has arisen that children’s medical needs are being neglected when their conditions are misdiagnosed as child abuse. This paper documents a case study in which the use of Child Protection procedures was linked to the belief that the child’s illness had “no organic cause.” The case study is contextualised in a review of literature relevant to the diagnostic process. The deployment of the Child Protection perspective resulted in significant delay in the diagnosis of the child’s brain tumour. The child was ultimately found to be suffering from an optic chasm mass lesion involving the hypothalamus and the medial temporal regions, resulting in Diencephalic Syndrome. The evidence in this case is that erring on the side of suspecting Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy/Fabricated and Induced Illness, was not “erring on the side of the child.” Several lessons need to be learned from the case. The importance of ensuring that the Child Protection perspective does not displace adequate assessment of alternative explanations for the child’s condition is emphasised, as is the need for good communication in medical relationships. Strategies involving empathy, mediation, negotiation and conflict resolution may provide a more appropriate and therapeutic alternative to the use of Child Protection procedures in cases where the diagnosis is contentious. The need to re-write relevant policy, protocols and guidance is imperative.http://la-press.com/article.php?article_id=803Delayed DiagnosisMiscarriages of JusticeIntracranial NeoplasmMedical ErrorHuman RightsService User Perspectives.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lynne Wrennall
spellingShingle Lynne Wrennall
Misdiagnosis of Child Abuse Related to Delay in Diagnosing a Paediatric Brain Tumour
Clinical Medicine: Pediatrics
Delayed Diagnosis
Miscarriages of Justice
Intracranial Neoplasm
Medical Error
Human Rights
Service User Perspectives.
author_facet Lynne Wrennall
author_sort Lynne Wrennall
title Misdiagnosis of Child Abuse Related to Delay in Diagnosing a Paediatric Brain Tumour
title_short Misdiagnosis of Child Abuse Related to Delay in Diagnosing a Paediatric Brain Tumour
title_full Misdiagnosis of Child Abuse Related to Delay in Diagnosing a Paediatric Brain Tumour
title_fullStr Misdiagnosis of Child Abuse Related to Delay in Diagnosing a Paediatric Brain Tumour
title_full_unstemmed Misdiagnosis of Child Abuse Related to Delay in Diagnosing a Paediatric Brain Tumour
title_sort misdiagnosis of child abuse related to delay in diagnosing a paediatric brain tumour
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Clinical Medicine: Pediatrics
issn 1178-220X
publishDate 2008-01-01
description Conflicting opinion regarding the relative weight that should be allocated to the investigation of organic causes of child illness, compared to the pursuit of suspicions of child abuse, has generated considerable public debate. The discourse of Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy/Fabricated and Induced Illness is at the centre of contention. In particular, concern has arisen that children’s medical needs are being neglected when their conditions are misdiagnosed as child abuse. This paper documents a case study in which the use of Child Protection procedures was linked to the belief that the child’s illness had “no organic cause.” The case study is contextualised in a review of literature relevant to the diagnostic process. The deployment of the Child Protection perspective resulted in significant delay in the diagnosis of the child’s brain tumour. The child was ultimately found to be suffering from an optic chasm mass lesion involving the hypothalamus and the medial temporal regions, resulting in Diencephalic Syndrome. The evidence in this case is that erring on the side of suspecting Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy/Fabricated and Induced Illness, was not “erring on the side of the child.” Several lessons need to be learned from the case. The importance of ensuring that the Child Protection perspective does not displace adequate assessment of alternative explanations for the child’s condition is emphasised, as is the need for good communication in medical relationships. Strategies involving empathy, mediation, negotiation and conflict resolution may provide a more appropriate and therapeutic alternative to the use of Child Protection procedures in cases where the diagnosis is contentious. The need to re-write relevant policy, protocols and guidance is imperative.
topic Delayed Diagnosis
Miscarriages of Justice
Intracranial Neoplasm
Medical Error
Human Rights
Service User Perspectives.
url http://la-press.com/article.php?article_id=803
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