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Journal Article

Citation

Carrizosa-Moog J, Isaza-Jaramillo S. Epilepsy Behav. 2020; 110: e107159.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.yebeh.2020.107159

PMID

32516745

Abstract

PURPOSE: The objective of this study was to review the existence and opinion Latin American adult and child neurologists have about the development and function of transition programs in epilepsy.
METHODS: This was a cross-sectional study. A questionnaire was constructed with sociodemographic variables, knowledge about transition programs, barriers for building up transition programs, and 21 topics regarding the degree of involvement of healthcare providers and carers should have during the transition process. The online questionnaire was sent to 136 Latin American chapter officers registered in the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) webpage and to 36 clinicians assisting to the 13th Latin American Summer School on Epilepsy.
RESULTS: The answer rate was 68% (117/172), and all 19 Latin American countries were represented. Adult neurologists represented 60.7%. Only 16.2% knew of transition programs in epilepsy. The main limitations for transition programs were poor education about transition (76.9%), inflexible healthcare systems (75.2%), absence of financial support (61.5%), need of multidisciplinary teams (59%), and scarce communication between child and adult neurologists (53%). Providers and carers are expected to get involved at a high degree in all 21 presented topics for a transition process. The topics with highest percentage of commitment were violence and carrying weapons (93.2%), mental health (92.3%), alcohol and drugs (91.4%), suicide (90.6%), care of own's disease (90.5%), mortality risk (89.7%), and integral healthcare (92.2%).
CONCLUSION: Only a few transition programs exist in Latin America. Knowing the benefits of and barriers for transition programs opens the opportunity to move further this strategy in the region considering local specificities. Education, communication skills, team working, and advocacy for adolescents with epilepsy could be initial starting points.


Language: en

Keywords

Humans; Cross-Sectional Studies; Child; Adult; Middle Aged; Education; Perception; Adolescent; Epilepsy; Young Adult; Surveys and Questionnaires; Follow-Up Studies; Latin America; Transition; Neurologists; Gaps; Transitional Care

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