Effect of health education on trainee teachers' knowledge, attitudes, and first aid management of epilepsy: An interventional study

Christian N. Eze, Olufunke M. Ebuehi, Francesco Brigo, Willem M. Otte, Stanley C. Igwe*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Purpose: High rates of poor knowledge of, and negative attitudes towards people with epilepsy (PWE) are generally found among school teachers. Their first aid epilepsy management skills are poor. It remains unknown if this is different among trainee teachers and whether educational intervention might reduce these rates. We examined the effect of health education on the knowledge, attitudes, and first aid management of epilepsy on trainee teachers in Nigeria.

Methods: Baseline data and socio-demographic determinants were collected from 226 randomly selected trainee teachers, at the Federal College of Education, Lagos, Nigeria, with self-administered questionnaires. They received a health intervention comprising an hour and half epilepsy lecture followed by a discussion. Baseline knowledge of, and attitudes towards PWE and their first aid epilepsy management skills were compared to post-interventional follow-up data collected twelve weeks later with similar questionnaires.

Results: At baseline the majority (61.9%) and largest proportion (44.2%) of respondents had negative attitudes and poor knowledge of epilepsy, respectively. The knowledge of, and attitudes towards epilepsy, and the first aid management skill increased in most respondents, post-intervention. The proportion of respondents with poor knowledge and negative attitudes dropped by 15.5% (p <0.0001) and 16.4% (p <0.0001) respectively. Correct knowledge concomitantly increased by 29.6% (p <0.0001) and good first aid management skills increased by 25.0% (p <0.0001) from baseline.

Conclusion: Epilepsy health education could increase trainee teachers' knowledge of, and attitudes towards epilepsy and facilitate correct first aid management. This emphasizes the potential benefit of incorporating an epilepsy tailored intervention programme into teachers' training curricula. (C) 2015 British Epilepsy Association. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)46-53
Number of pages8
JournalSeizure : the Journal of the British Epilepsy Association
Volume33
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2015

Keywords

  • Epilepsy
  • Knowledge
  • Attitude
  • First aid management
  • Health education
  • Trainee teachers
  • DEVELOPING-COUNTRIES
  • PERCEPTION
  • STUDENTS
  • NIGERIA
  • 21ST-CENTURY
  • PREVALENCE
  • SECONDARY
  • BEHAVIOR

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