Brain tumours: a matter of life and death
29 October 2021
Autumn 2021
The Brain Tumour Charity’s Lorcan Butler on detecting serious disease during an eye examination.
As Optical Engagement Manager for the Brain Tumour Charity, Lorcan Butler MCOptom is trying to spread a very simple but vitally important message: optometrists can detect brain tumours and, ultimately, save lives.
“The general public just doesn’t understand that optometrists can detect brain tumours. If people have headaches or an eye problem, first they’ll go to their GP. Then they’ll go to their pharmacist. And only then will they go to an optometrist,” he says.
The statistics surrounding the issue are significant. Lorcan says that about half of people who go to a GP with suspected brain tumours are misdiagnosed as having something else, such as headaches, depression, anxiety or even hay fever. He adds that around a third have to go back multiple times before they are referred for further investigation at hospital and about 60% of brain tumours are diagnosed at A&E, by which time it tends to be a very late diagnosis and results in a poor prognosis.
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Related further reading
The College of Optometrists and the Optical Fees Negotiating Committee (OFNC) call on the government to make a long-term commitment to primary eye care in its NHS 10-Year Health Plan as part of the shift from hospital to community.
The College of Optometrists calls for vital community minor and urgent eye care services to be universally commissioned in England
Optometrists talk to patients about eye health every day, and have an important role to play in health promotion and public health.