Health & Medicine - Posted by Andy McGlashen-Michigan State on Tuesday, March 12, 2013 11:36 - 0 Comments    
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Peer groups may relieve epilepsy’s stigma

"In Africa a lot of people think epilepsy is contagious or associated with witchcraft," says Melissa Elafros. After a year of peer support group meetings, an evaluation of the youths with epilepsy showed that they felt significantly less stigmatized. Above, Elafros's mentor Professor Gretchen Birbeck. (Credit: Kurt Stepnitz/Michigan State)

MICHIGAN STATE (US) — Support groups could help fight the stigma surrounding epilepsy in much of the developing world, according to new research conducted in Zambia.


The researchers report in the journal Epilepsy and Behavior that young people with the disease felt significantly less stigmatized after meeting regularly to discuss their illness.

Straight from the Source

Read the original study

DOI: 10.1016/j.yebeh.2013.01.005

While drugs are widely available to reduce epileptic seizures, the stigma and discrimination that arise from those seizures is a thornier problem, says Melissa Elafros, who is pursuing medical and doctoral degrees in Michigan State University’s department of epidemiology and biostatistics.

“In Africa a lot of people think epilepsy is contagious or associated with witchcraft,” she says. “If you’re told something often enough, you start to believe it’s true. So people with epilepsy start to internalize that stigma.”

That feeling of shame leads some people to stop seeking treatment, Elafros says. Children with epilepsy often drop out of school, and some adults stop looking for work.

Peer support groups have been shown to help with other kinds of stigma, so Elafros and colleagues decided to test the groups as an intervention for epilepsy patients.

They trained local partners to facilitate monthly meetings of support groups made up of men, women, and youths from 12 to 18 years old. The meetings involved guided discussion among the participants of epilepsy-related challenges they’d faced and solutions they’d found.

After a year of meetings, an evaluation of the youths showed that they felt significantly less stigmatized. There was a trend toward improvement in felt stigma among the adults, though it was not statistically significant.

“It could be that adults have just learned to cope with things as they are,” Elafros says. “Or adults may need some larger intervention than that.”

Still, the findings offer a much-needed glimmer of hope after decades in which several studies described the problem of epilepsy-related stigma but few systematic interventions were aimed at fixing it.

“This shows we can finally do something for people with epilepsy,” she says. “The idea that you could intervene in a teenager’s life and help them better cope with a condition they may have for the rest of their life, I think that’s really quite significant.”

Elafros was funded by the National Institutes of Health and mentored by Michigan State’s Gretchen Birbeck, a professor of neurology and ophthalmology who’s been working on epilepsy in Africa for two decades.

Source: Michigan State University

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