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. 2016 Mar:36:49-56.
doi: 10.1016/j.seizure.2016.02.008. Epub 2016 Feb 20.

The epilepsy treatment gap in rural Tanzania: A community-based study in adults

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Free article

The epilepsy treatment gap in rural Tanzania: A community-based study in adults

Ewan Hunter et al. Seizure. 2016 Mar.
Free article

Abstract

Purpose: Most people with epilepsy (PWE) in low-income countries are not treated. We identified risk factors for the epilepsy treatment gap in rural Tanzania.

Methods: We identified adult PWE in a community-based prevalence study. Factors associated with failure to access or default from medical care were identified using logistic regression modelling.

Results: A total of 291 PWE were included, of whom 253 (86.9%) had presented to medical services. Failure to present was positively associated with using alcohol (odds ratio (OR) 4.20; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.63 to 10.82) or attending traditional healers (OR 2.62; CI 1.00 to 6.83) and inversely associated with having completed primary education (OR 0.33; CI 0.11 to 0.96). Default from treatment was associated with being male (OR 3.35; CI 1.39 to 8.09), having a seizure-related injury (OR 2.64; CI 1.12 to 6.19), believing in a supernatural cause for epilepsy (OR 5.44; CI 1.48 to 19.94) or having no expressed knowledge of cause (OR 5.29; CI 1.60 to 17.52). Cases less likely to default had a duration of epilepsy greater than 10 years (OR 0.28; CI 0.09 to 0.90) or had previously received a seizure-related diagnosis (OR 0.25; CI 0.09 to 0.65). Of all 291 PWE included, 118 denied taking AEDs; the epilepsy treatment gap in this population was therefore 40.5% (95% CI 34.9 to 46.2).

Conclusion: Interventions to improve access to education and to support formal diagnoses may promote access to, and retention under, medical care for PWE in rural Tanzania and in other low-income countries.

Keywords: Africa; Epidemiology; Risk-factors.

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