1. Attitudes toward persons with epilepsy as friends: Results of a factorial survey.
- Author
-
Walther, Katrin, Kriwy, Peter, Stritzelberger, Jenny, Graf, Wolfgang, Gollwitzer, Stefanie, Lang, Johannes D., Reindl, Caroline, Schwab, Stefan, Welte, Tamara M., and Hamer, Hajo. M.
- Subjects
- *
ATTITUDES toward illness , *SOCIAL desirability , *PEOPLE with epilepsy , *SEIZURES (Medicine) , *FACTORIALS - Abstract
Objective: Discrimination against persons with epilepsy (PWEs) may persist. The aim of this study was to examine whether epilepsy is an obstacle to desired friendship. Methods: A factorial survey (vignettes), which is less biased by social desirability, was applied to PWEs, their relatives, and lay persons. The vignettes described a person who was varied by the dimensions of age (younger, same age, older), gender (male, female), disease (healthy, mild epilepsy, severe epilepsy [generalized tonic–clonic seizures], diabetes), origin (German, non‐German), contact (phone/internet, activities at home, activities outside), frequency of contacts (weekly, monthly), and distance (around the corner, 10 km away). Respondents rated their willingness to befriend the person on a 10‐point Likert scale. Multivariate regression determined the contribution of each dimension on the judgment. Results: Participants were 64 PWEs (age = 37.1 ± 14.0 years), 64 relatives of PWEs (age = 45.1 ± 13.6 years), and 98 controls without contact with PWEs (age = 24.4 ± 10.1 years). Controls were less interested in a friendship with a PWE with mild epilepsy (−3.4%) and even more avoided PWEs with severe epilepsy (−11.7%), whereas in PWEs with tonic–clonic seizures, a mild form of epilepsy was actually conducive to friendship (+7.0%). Controls preferred females (+5.0%) and disliked younger people (−12.3%) and contacts via the internet or telephone (−7.3%). PWEs were also less interested in younger people (−5.8%), and relatives of PWEs had a lower preference for friendships with longer distance (−2.3%). Significance: PWEs still suffer from a risk of social avoidance, and this becomes more evident with generalized motor seizures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF