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Prevalence of epilepsy its treatment gap and knowledge, attitude and practice of its population in sub-urban Senegal an ILAE/IBE/WHO study.

Authors :
Ndoye NF
Sow AD
Diop AG
Sessouma B
Séne-Diouf F
Boissy L
Wone I
Touré K
Ndiaye M
Ndiaye P
de Boer H
Engel J
Mandlhate C
Meinardi H
Prilipko L
Sander JW
Source :
Seizure [Seizure] 2005 Mar; Vol. 14 (2), pp. 106-11.
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

A door-to-door survey was used to determine the prevalence of epilepsy among 4500 people within the Pikine Health District (population 480,000) Senegal. Prevalence was 14.2/1000, and 23.4% of all people with epilepsy had never received appropriate treatment. Figures for the prevalence had increased since a previous survey in 1989. In parallel a study of knowledge attitude and practice was performed in the same district. Salient findings were that: two-thirds of interviewees had at some time witnessed a seizure, 51% agreed when asked if epilepsy is caused by evil spirits, 35% said epilepsy is contagious, only about 18% said that traditional therapy is best, 60% would not mind their child to play with a child with epilepsy but only 32% would agree if their child would want to marry a person with epilepsy.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1059-1311
Volume :
14
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Seizure
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
15694563
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.seizure.2004.11.003