| Literature DB >> 31789104 |
Debbie Terry1, Kristen Trott2.
Abstract
Psychogenic nonepileptic events (PNEE) are paroxysmal changes in behavior resembling epileptic seizures but with no electrographic correlate and are instead caused by psychological factors. In this qualitative study, semistructured interviews were conducted with 10 school nurses to identify how they perceive the experience of caring for a student with PNEE as well as supportive factors and barriers to optimal management of PNEE in schools. Several themes were identified: lack of diagnosis awareness by school staff leading to impressions that the student was "faking" the events, inadequate information provided by a health-care provider regarding the diagnosis in general and specifically about the individual student leading to a reliance on information from the student's family, feelings of doubt and insecurity about the diagnosis and management of the events, and reliance on the school nurse to develop a response plan and to manage the events which can be very time-consuming.Entities:
Keywords: mental health; pseudoseizure; psychogenic nonepileptic seizure; school nurse knowledge/perceptions/self-efficacy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31789104 DOI: 10.1177/1059840519889395
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Sch Nurs ISSN: 1059-8405 Impact factor: 2.835