| Literature DB >> 33050899 |
Liyan Qiu1, Lixiao Shen1, Junli Wang1, Fang Ren1, Mingyu Xu1, Fan Jiang2, Xiaoyang Sheng1, Fei Li1, Feng Li3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Epilepsy is one of the most common neurological problems among children. The aim of this survey was to assess the knowledge and attitude among preschool staff in Shanghai regarding epilepsy.Entities:
Keywords: Attitudes; Epilepsy; First-aid knowledge; Preschool staff; Training
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33050899 PMCID: PMC7550838 DOI: 10.1186/s12887-020-02376-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Demographic characteristics of the staff members (N = 1069)
| Characteristics | aN (%) |
|---|---|
| Kindergarten category | |
| Public | 847 (79.2%) |
| Other | 222 (20.8%) |
| Staff member’s highest education level | |
| High school or below | 189 (17.7%) |
| College or above | 880 (82.3%) |
| Staff categories | |
| Had health-care training | 193 (18.1%) |
| Did not have health-care training | 876 (81.9%) |
| Teaching (years) | |
| < 10 | 315 (29.5%) |
| 10–30 | 635 (59.4%) |
| > 30 | 119 (11.1%) |
| Major | |
| Medical related | 33 (3.0%) |
| Preschool education | 612 (57.3%) |
| Other | 424 (39.7%) |
aN denotes the number of valid answers
Familiarity with epilepsy (N = 1069)
| Item | aN (%) | aN (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Yes | No | |
| Had received epilepsy-related information or training | 705 (65.8%) | 366 (34.2%) |
| Source of the information | ||
| Self-study | 86 (8.1%) | 983 (91.8%) |
| Public media | 298 (27.9%) | 771 (72.1%) |
| Doctors | 71 (6.6%) | 998 (93.4%) |
| Parents of children with epilepsy | 78 (7.3%) | 991 (92.7%) |
| In conversation | 149 (13.9%) | 920 (86.1%) |
| Attended relevant training | 387 (36.2%) | 682 (63.8%) |
| Had seen someone have a seizure previously | 314 (29.4%) | 755 (70.6%) |
| Experience with teaching a child with epilepsy | 202 (18.9%) | 867 (81.1%) |
| Experience with applying first-aid for seizures | 188 (17.6%) | 881 (82.4%) |
aN denotes the number of valid answers
General and first-aid knowledge about epilepsy (N = 1069)
| Item | Teachers With healthcare training | Other | Total. | Chi-square test value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Epilepsy is an infectious disease | 45 (23.3%) | 137 (15.6%) | 182 (17%) | 5.060 | 0.029 |
| Epilepsy is a chronic brain disease and cannot be cured or controlled | 117 (57.9%) | 452 (52.1%) | 569 (69.3%) | 2.204 | 0.138 |
Have experience applying first-aid for seizures | 61 (31.6%) | 127 (14.5%) | 188 (17.6%) | 31.848 | < 0.001 |
| Lay the child on his or her side | 85 (44.0%) | 182 (20.8%) | 266 (24.9%) | 45.684 | < 0.001 |
| Move harmful objects out of the way | 59 (30.6%) | 163 (18.6%) | 221 (20.7%) | 13.755 | < 0.001 |
| Protect the child’s head | 93 (48.2%) | 294 (33.6%) | 386 (36.1%) | 16.646 | < 0.001 |
| Wait until the seizure ends | 24 (12.4%) | 60 (6.8%) | 84 (7.9%) | 6.816 | 0.009 |
| Administer related medicines | 8 (4.1%) | 34 (3.9%) | 42 (3.9%) | 0.029 | 0.864 |
| Dial the 120 emergency number | 89 (46.1%) | 345 (39.4%) | 433 (40.1%) | 2.971 | 0.085 |
| Pull the child’s tongue | 7 (3.6%) | 26 (3.0%) | 33 (3.1%) | 0.230 | 0.632 |
| Adjust cramped limbs | 19 (9.8%) | 74 (8.4%) | 93 (8.7%) | 0.389 | 0.533 |
| Put something in the child’s mouth | 118 (61.1%) | 620 (70.8%) | 738 (69%) | 6.870 | 0.009 |
aN denotes the number of valid answers
Attitude toward epilepsy (N = 1069)
| Item | Na (%) | Na (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Yes | No | |
| Would let their child play or study with children with epilepsy | 681 (63.7%) | 388 (36.3%) |
| Most children with epilepsy can attend public school | 873 (81.7%) | 196 (18.3%) |
| Seizures are not dangerous for other children | 749 (70.1%) | 320 (29.9%) |
| Would restrict the activities of children with epilepsy | 437 (40.9%) | 632 (59.1%) |
| Afraid having children with epilepsy in their classroom | 757 (70.8%) | 312 (29.2%) |
| Children with epilepsy should be placed in a dedicated classroom | 522 (48.8%) | 547 (51.2%) |
aN denotes the number of valid answers