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Lisa Gray Lisa Gray

Effects of Perceived Stigma, Unemployment and Depression on Suicidal Risk in People With Epilepsy

This study examined whether and how perceived stigma, unemployment and depression interact to influence suicidal risk in people with epilepsy. The results showed that in fact perceived stigma was associated with depression severity and suicidal risk.

Getting out from the shadow of perceived stigma may help reducing suicidal risk in people with epilepsy. In addition, improving employment status of people with epilepsy may attenuate the indirect effect of perceived stigma on suicidal risk through depression severity.

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Lisa Gray Lisa Gray

Exercise-Linked Consequences of Epilepsy

Review of how physical exercise affects epilepsy physiopathology reveals physical exercise is an excellent non-pharmacological tool that can be used in the treatment of epilepsy

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Lisa Gray Lisa Gray

Missed, Mistaken, Stalled: Identifying Components of Delay to Diagnosis in Epilepsy

Missed, Mistaken, Stalled: A systematic research literature review found that a substantial proportion of individuals report a delay in epilepsy diagnoses, suggesting a missed opportunity for early epilepsy care and management.

This review found that diagnostic delay consists of several components and that recommendations for future research include examining each before consideration of interventions is made.

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Lisa Gray Lisa Gray

Managing Depression and Anxiety in People with Epilepsy: A Survey of Epilepsy Health Professionals by The ILAE Psychology Task Force

Findings of a survey commissioned by the International League Against Epilepsy suggest there are ongoing barriers to effective mental health care and the importance of managing depression and anxiety in patients with epilepsy by updating protocols in this area and the integration of mental health professionals within epilepsy settings.

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Lisa Gray Lisa Gray

Epilepsy Discovery Reveals Why Some Seizures Prove Deadly

New research from the University of Virginia School of Medicine has shed light on the No. 1 cause of epilepsy deaths, suggesting a long-sought answer for why some patients die unexpectedly following an epileptic

The new understanding will help scientists in their efforts to develop ways to prevent sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP).

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