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Are the children with epilepsy treated traditionally a disadvantaged group? A pilot study

Introduction: in sub-Saharan Africa, the proportion of persons with epilepsy who seek traditional treatment is estimated at 80%. Despite that children are the firsts concerned by epilepsy, the characteristics and particularities of the children with epilepsy (CWE) who resort to traditional treatment...

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Published in:The Pan African medical journal 2016-04, Vol.23 (229)
Main Authors: Ma, Thierry Matonda, Lelo, Gilbert Mananga, Nkosi, Magloire Mpembi, Madinga, Joule, Kola, Constantin Kabwe, Maketa, Vivi, Lutumba, Pascal, Polman, Katja, Boelart, Marleen, Muyembe, Jean-Jacques, Ma, Samuel Mampunza
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container_issue 229
container_start_page
container_title The Pan African medical journal
container_volume 23
creator Ma, Thierry Matonda
Lelo, Gilbert Mananga
Nkosi, Magloire Mpembi
Madinga, Joule
Kola, Constantin Kabwe
Maketa, Vivi
Lutumba, Pascal
Polman, Katja
Boelart, Marleen
Muyembe, Jean-Jacques
Ma, Samuel Mampunza
description Introduction: in sub-Saharan Africa, the proportion of persons with epilepsy who seek traditional treatment is estimated at 80%. Despite that children are the firsts concerned by epilepsy, the characteristics and particularities of the children with epilepsy (CWE) who resort to traditional treatment are not known. The aim of this pilot study was to identify clinical particularities of the CWE who resort to traditional treatment. Methods: CWE between 6 to 17 years were included in the study based on their histories of previous antiepileptic treatments. The CWE previously treated by traditional healers were compared to others CWE. Results: data from 140 CWE whose previous treatments had been documented were selected. The duration of epilepsy (7 [3.0-9.8] years versus 3 [1.0-7.0] years, p=0.013) was higher for the CWE traditionally treated compared to the CWE without any antiepileptic treatment. The seizure frequency (8.7 [1.5-91.3]/month versus 1 [3-30.4]/month, p=0.036) was higher for the CWE traditionally treated compared to the CWE without any antiepileptic treatment, but the p-value was under the Bonferroni correction (p=0.017). There was no differences between the CWE traditionally treated and the CWE previously treated with antiepileptic drugs. Conclusion: compared to others, the CWE who resort to traditional medicine spend much time before consulting health facilities and could have a more serious epilepsy. We have discussed on factors that could explain these differences.
doi_str_mv 10.11604/pamj.2016.23.229.9165
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A pilot study</title><source>Publicly Available Content Database</source><source>PubMed Central</source><creator>Ma, Thierry Matonda ; Lelo, Gilbert Mananga ; Nkosi, Magloire Mpembi ; Madinga, Joule ; Kola, Constantin Kabwe ; Maketa, Vivi ; Lutumba, Pascal ; Polman, Katja ; Boelart, Marleen ; Muyembe, Jean-Jacques ; Ma, Samuel Mampunza</creator><creatorcontrib>Ma, Thierry Matonda ; Lelo, Gilbert Mananga ; Nkosi, Magloire Mpembi ; Madinga, Joule ; Kola, Constantin Kabwe ; Maketa, Vivi ; Lutumba, Pascal ; Polman, Katja ; Boelart, Marleen ; Muyembe, Jean-Jacques ; Ma, Samuel Mampunza</creatorcontrib><description>Introduction: in sub-Saharan Africa, the proportion of persons with epilepsy who seek traditional treatment is estimated at 80%. Despite that children are the firsts concerned by epilepsy, the characteristics and particularities of the children with epilepsy (CWE) who resort to traditional treatment are not known. The aim of this pilot study was to identify clinical particularities of the CWE who resort to traditional treatment. Methods: CWE between 6 to 17 years were included in the study based on their histories of previous antiepileptic treatments. The CWE previously treated by traditional healers were compared to others CWE. Results: data from 140 CWE whose previous treatments had been documented were selected. The duration of epilepsy (7 [3.0-9.8] years versus 3 [1.0-7.0] years, p=0.013) was higher for the CWE traditionally treated compared to the CWE without any antiepileptic treatment. The seizure frequency (8.7 [1.5-91.3]/month versus 1 [3-30.4]/month, p=0.036) was higher for the CWE traditionally treated compared to the CWE without any antiepileptic treatment, but the p-value was under the Bonferroni correction (p=0.017). There was no differences between the CWE traditionally treated and the CWE previously treated with antiepileptic drugs. Conclusion: compared to others, the CWE who resort to traditional medicine spend much time before consulting health facilities and could have a more serious epilepsy. 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A pilot study</title><title>The Pan African medical journal</title><description>Introduction: in sub-Saharan Africa, the proportion of persons with epilepsy who seek traditional treatment is estimated at 80%. Despite that children are the firsts concerned by epilepsy, the characteristics and particularities of the children with epilepsy (CWE) who resort to traditional treatment are not known. The aim of this pilot study was to identify clinical particularities of the CWE who resort to traditional treatment. Methods: CWE between 6 to 17 years were included in the study based on their histories of previous antiepileptic treatments. The CWE previously treated by traditional healers were compared to others CWE. Results: data from 140 CWE whose previous treatments had been documented were selected. The duration of epilepsy (7 [3.0-9.8] years versus 3 [1.0-7.0] years, p=0.013) was higher for the CWE traditionally treated compared to the CWE without any antiepileptic treatment. The seizure frequency (8.7 [1.5-91.3]/month versus 1 [3-30.4]/month, p=0.036) was higher for the CWE traditionally treated compared to the CWE without any antiepileptic treatment, but the p-value was under the Bonferroni correction (p=0.017). There was no differences between the CWE traditionally treated and the CWE previously treated with antiepileptic drugs. Conclusion: compared to others, the CWE who resort to traditional medicine spend much time before consulting health facilities and could have a more serious epilepsy. 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subjects Children
Epilepsy
Human health sciences
Neurologie
Neurology
Sciences de la santé humaine
sub-Saharan Africa
Traditional treatment
title Are the children with epilepsy treated traditionally a disadvantaged group? A pilot study
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