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Case ref:201909298
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Date:October 2022
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Body:Dumfries and Galloway NHS Board
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Sector:Health
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Outcome:Upheld, recommendations
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Subject:Clinical treatment / diagnosis
Summary
C complained about the care and treatment that they received from the board for their right sided hearing loss. They complained that they had been misdiagnosed and wrongly advised that a hearing aid would improve their situation, and that no surgery would help them. C later accepted a second opinion and was referred to a hospital outwith the board area where they received a different diagnosis and treatment (a bone anchored hearing aid) which they said improved their quality of life.
We took independent advice from an ear, nose and throat consultant. We found that C’s audiogram (hearing test results graph) had been unreasonably misinterpreted and C was misdiagnosed. We found that the treatment that was given (a standard hearing aid) was not suitable for C’s actual condition. We found that C should have been offered a Crosaid (a device worn behind the ear which routes sound from the affected ear to the unaffected ear), or the surgical option (a bone anchored hearing aid) which was eventually provided when C obtained a second opinion.
We also considered that C was not provided with reasonable advice regarding the use of a hearing aid, that there was a failure to take a careful history for C and pick up on the clues in the referral letter from C’s GP as to the nature of the onset of C’s hearing loss, and a failure to arrange appropriate investigations for C. We also found that there had been failures in the way in which the board had communicated with C about their hearing loss, and we were critical of the way the board investigated and responded to C’s complaint. We therefore upheld the complaint.
Recommendations
What we asked the organisation to do in this case:
- Apologise to C for unreasonably advising them that they had otosclerosis (a disorder, sometimes hereditary, in which there is formation of new bone around the base of the bone of the middle ear, resulting in progressive hearing loss), when they had sensorineural hearing loss (resulting from damaged hair cells in the inner ear), failing to provide C with appropriate treatment for their hearing condition and failing to provide appropriate advice on the use of hearing aids. The apology should meet the standards set out in the SPSO guidelines on apology available at www.spso.org.uk/informan-leaflets.
What we said should change to put things right in future:
- For the board to appropriately interpret scan results, make appropriate diagnoses in cases such as this, take into account all relevant information, including patient history/GP referral information and test results, identify and arrange appropriate investigations and provide appropriate treatment and advice on the use of hearing aid devices.
In relation to complaints handling, we recommended:
- The board's complaint handling monitoring and governance system should ensure that concerns raised are appropriately investigated, failings (and good practice) are identified and that learning from complaints is used to drive service development and improvement. There should be a review of complaints by senior staff during the board’s investigative process.
We have asked the organisation to provide us with evidence that they have implemented the recommendations we have made on this case by the deadline we set.