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Special education needs of children with newly diagnosed epilepsy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 October 2005

Anne T Berg
Affiliation:
BIOS/Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL, USA.
Susan N Smith
Affiliation:
Department of Pediatrics, Yale Medical School, New Haven, CT, USA.
Daniel Frobish
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics, NIU, DeKalb, IL, USA.
Susan R Levy
Affiliation:
Department of Pediatrics and Department of Neurology, Yale Medical School, USA.
Francine M Testa
Affiliation:
Department of Pediatrics and Department of Neurology, Yale Medical School, USA.
Barbara Beckerman
Affiliation:
Department of Pediatrics, Yale Medical School, New Haven, CT, USA.
Shlomo Shinnar
Affiliation:
Departments of Neurology and Pediatrics, Montefiore Medical Center and the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, NY, USA.
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Abstract

Children with epilepsy often experience poor social and educational outcomes. This study aimed to determine the timing of services with respect to the onset of seizures. It also aimed to identify the aspects of childhood epilepsy (type of epilepsy, etiology, seizure control, and treatment) that are associated with the use of special education services. As part of a prospective community-based study, 613 children were recruited when first diagnosed with epilepsy. Mean age at first seizure was 5 years 11 months (SD 4, range 1mo to 15y 8mo). Parents were interviewed 5 years after children were first diagnosed with epilepsy (n=542; 276 [51%] males). Children's mean age at time of interview was 11 years 10 months (SD 4y 1mo, range 5y 8mo to 21y 8mo). Etiology was classified as idiopathic (n=181, 33.4%), cryptogenic (n=261, 48.2%), and remote symptomatic (n=100, 18.5%). Service use was reported in 315 (58%) children. Compared with neurologically intact children (i.e. cryptogenic and idiopathic etiology; n=415, 77%), children with a remote symptomatic etiology and/or an epileptic encephalopathy (n=127, 23%) received services more frequently (88% vs 49%, p<0.001). In the former group, services were initiated for 66 (15%) children before their first seizure; according to age at onset, services were initiated before the first seizures in 12/164 (7.3%) if <5 years, 34/171 (19.9%) if 5–9 years, and 20/80 (25%) if >10 years. A large proportion of children with epilepsy, even if neurologically otherwise normal, receive special education services. Initiation of services often precedes onset of seizures even in neurologically intact children. This suggests that behavioral and cognitive abnormalities may predate the onset of epilepsy and are not necessarily the direct consequences of epilepsy.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
2005 Mac Keith Press

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