ORIGINAL: The Stigma of Epilepsy among Patients Attending the Epilepsy Clinic at Connaught Hospital, Sierra Leone
West Afr J Med. November 2023; 40 (11): 1209-1215 PMID: 38096502
Keywords:
Enacted, Epilepsy, Perceived, Sierra Leone, StigmaAbstract
Background: Epilepsy is one of the world's most common neurological disorders with about eighty percent of cases living in low and middle-income countries. Due to superstitious cultural and traditional beliefs in Sub-Saharan Africa, the stigma associated with epilepsy is particularly disabling. Stigma negatively affects the psychosocial wellbeing of people with epilepsy (PWE) and their acceptance of medical treatment. Very limited studies have been done on the types and extent of stigma in PWE in Sierra Leone.
Objective: This study will assess the extent and correlates of perceived and enacted stigma among patients attending the epilepsy clinic at Connaught hospital in Freetown, Sierra Leone.
Methods: Using a semi-structured questionnaire to identify both perceived and enacted stigma, a cross-sectional descriptive study was conducted among patients attending the epilepsy clinic at Connaught hospital aged ten years and above with no major psychiatric co-morbidity. Frequency of stigma and socio-demographic and clinical correlates of stigma were determined.
Results: Of the 128 patients, (9 below 18 years) 57.8% were males. Participants had a mean age of 32.9 years. 53.9% and 79.9% of participants reported experiencing perceived and enacted stigma, respectively. Longer duration of illness and being single correlated with perceived stigma, while lower educational achievement and early age of onset of seizure correlated with enacted stigma. A seizure frequency of more than two attacks a month was significantly related to both forms of stigma.
Conclusion: The level of epilepsy-related social stigma is high in Sierra Leone. This is likely due to poor community education, leading to misconceptions and biases. An appropriate educational intervention coupled with effective clinical management of cases is needed to mitigate epilepsy-related stigma.
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