Anti thumb-sucking device almost kills North Bay boy - Action News
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Anti thumb-sucking device almost kills North Bay boy

A North Bay dentist has been handed a warning after a 4-year-old patient nearly died from an anti-thumb-sucking device.
A child opens wide as a dentist and assistant use tools to work on his teeth.
A North Bay, Ont., dentist has been warned by a professional watchdog group to 'take responsibility for ongoing care' after a four-year-old patient nearly died. (iStock)

A North Bay, Ont., dentist has been handed a warning after a four-year-old patient nearly died.

The Health Professions Appeal and Review Board's decision does not name the dentist.

"Dr. H," as he's referred to, was standing in for a colleague on leave when he saw theboy in August2012.

The childcame to the officewith his mother, who reported that her sonhad a thumb-sucking problem.

After discussing it with the boy's mother, Dr. Hdecided to affixan anti-thumb-sucking device into the top of the child's mouth.

A version of the device is known as a "hay rake" a spiky, pronged devicethat makes thumb-sucking unpleasant.

The report from the board doesn't specify what kind of antithumb-sucking device was used in this case.

According to the report, a dental hygienist installed the device on Sept. 18. The dentist then "reviewed intraoralphotographs of the patient's mouth and the placement of the appliance" before he signed off on the work.

But the next day, the boy was brought back into the office with problems.His sister reportedly said he hadn't been eating or drinking since the procedure was done, and had been drooling.

The hygienist saw the child,and noted the boy was "wan and lethargic,but did not appear to be in physical or mental distress, and was coherent and communicative."

The hygienistsaid,at that point, she called the child's father, butwas subsequently told not to take out the device.

Turn for the worse

According to the report, at 3 a.m. thenext morning less than two days after the device was put in the boy was taken to the emergency room at the North Bay Regional Health Centre.

According to hospital staff, "the patient was significantly dehydrated ... and [in an] altered mental state. The patient required intravenous resuscitation for failure to thrive."

The hospital report says the boy had not been eating ordrinking, had not been sleepingand had been throwing up.

The dentist and hygienist said they were toldnothing about the lack of sleep or vomiting.

According to the report, "special arrangements were made ... so that [thehygienist] could attend [the hospital]and remove the appliance from the patient's mouth, which she did in the early afternoon [of the same day]."

The boy was released from hospital two days later.

The dentist has been cautioned against giving too much responsibility to his hygienist, and about using such thumb-sucking devices on kids who may be too young.

The committee also warned "not to allow pressure from patients or their caregivers to dictate his treatment decisions."

Read the report here.

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story said the anti-thumb-sucking device put in the child's mouth was a hay-rake. In fact, the report from the Health Professions Appeal and Review Board doesn't specify what kind of anti-thumb-sucking device was used in this case.
    Feb 26, 2015 4:12 PM ET