Knowledge, attitudes, and practices of caregivers of children with epilepsy in Sudan

•The least proportion of caregivers knew that epilepsy did not emanate from a supernatural origin.•Most caregivers believed epilepsy caused lost opportunities for study.•Most caregivers believed epilepsy was looked upon negatively by others.•Less than half of the caregivers rolled their child on to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Epilepsy & behavior 2021-10, Vol.123, p.108283-108283, Article 108283
Hauptverfasser: El-Amin, Rahba O., El-Sadig, Sarah M., Mohamed, Inaam N.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•The least proportion of caregivers knew that epilepsy did not emanate from a supernatural origin.•Most caregivers believed epilepsy caused lost opportunities for study.•Most caregivers believed epilepsy was looked upon negatively by others.•Less than half of the caregivers rolled their child on to the side during a seizure.•The child’s clinical parameters had a significant effect on caregivers’ knowledge scores. To explore the knowledge, attitudes, and practices of caregivers of children with epilepsy. This cross-sectional study included 107 consecutive caregivers of children diagnosed with epilepsy, attending the neurology outpatient clinic in a Pediatric tertiary university hospital, in Khartoum, Sudan for regular check-up. Data were obtained by an interviewer through a structured questionnaire, while clinical parameters of children with epilepsy were taken from medical records. Most respondents knew that epilepsy is not an infectious disease (92.5%), while the least proportion of caregivers (41.1%) knew that epilepsy did not emanate from a supernatural origin. The majority of caregivers were with the idea that epilepsy caused lost opportunities for study (66.4%) and that epilepsy was looked upon negatively by others (64.5%). Less than half (39.7%) of these caregivers rolled their child on to the side during a seizure, and more than a third (37.2%) admitted to sprinkling water over the child during his/her seizure. Caregivers’ of children with Generalized Tonic-Clonic (GTC) convulsions, reported significantly lower knowledge scores than caregivers whose children did not experience GTC seizures (p = 0.016). Caregivers of children with GTC seizures were more likely to believe epilepsy was for the most part hereditary (p = 0.006), and that children with epilepsy lost consciousness during a seizure (p 
ISSN:1525-5050
1525-5069
DOI:10.1016/j.yebeh.2021.108283