Beth K. Rush , Luke Kim , Steve Savinoff , Meagan Watson , Laura Strom
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Ask the Patient: Goals for Functional seizure treatment
Treatment trials for functional seizure (FS) help improve functioning and reduce disability in affected individuals. Clinical trials have prioritized clinician-defined outcomes, but no studies have directly asked adults with FS what they hope to accomplish. This study examined patient-defined goals for treatment in a consecutive cohort of 826 adults with FS referred for outpatient treatment. Goals were reviewed and sorted into 6 categories with 32.5% of goals related to seizure management, 21.8% to abstract functional improvement, 20.3% to concrete functional improvement, 14.8% to seizure education, 10.1% to psychiatry tools, and 0.5% to Other. Although treatment trials have prioritized reduced event frequency as a primary outcome, people with FS most frequently prioritize goals for functional improvement. Data suggests that rehabilitation metrics of FS treatment outcome may be just as, or more important to adults with FS than what medical providers prioritize for outcome success. Study findings have implications for how to define FS treatment success and suggest equal prioritization of patient-centered goals to medically-defined goals in trial design.
期刊介绍:
Epilepsy & Behavior is the fastest-growing international journal uniquely devoted to the rapid dissemination of the most current information available on the behavioral aspects of seizures and epilepsy.
Epilepsy & Behavior presents original peer-reviewed articles based on laboratory and clinical research. Topics are drawn from a variety of fields, including clinical neurology, neurosurgery, neuropsychiatry, neuropsychology, neurophysiology, neuropharmacology, and neuroimaging.
From September 2012 Epilepsy & Behavior stopped accepting Case Reports for publication in the journal. From this date authors who submit to Epilepsy & Behavior will be offered a transfer or asked to resubmit their Case Reports to its new sister journal, Epilepsy & Behavior Case Reports.