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National300,000 Citizens are epileptic - Prof. Patrick Adjei

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300,000 Citizens are epileptic – Prof. Patrick Adjei

It has emerged that about 300,000 of the Ghanaian populace is epileptic.

This was revealed by an epileptologist at the University of Ghana, Legon, Prof. Patrick Adjei, at an intersectoral global action plan on epilepsy, neurological disorders and strengthening public health approach to epilepsy in the country.

According to Professor Patrick Adjei, victims of the disorder are oblivious to the condition due to a lack of proper diagnosis.

What is epilepsy?

Epilepsy is a brain disorder in which nerve cell activity in the brain is disturbed, causing seizures.

During a seizure, a person experiences abnormal behaviour, symptoms and sensations, sometimes including loss of consciousness.

It occurs as a result of a genetic disorder or an acquired brain injury, such as a trauma or stroke. Symptoms of the disorder include uncontrollable jerking and shaking, called a “fit”, losing awareness and staring blankly into space, among others.

It is estimated that, globally, about 50 million people suffer from the disorder. The World Health Organisation (WHO) has indicated that 80 percent of this number live in low and middle-income countries.

Meanwhile, WHO Representative in Ghana, Dr Francis Kasolo, has revealed that efforts are being put in place to reduce the gap in epilepsy treatment in the country.

According to him, over 2,700 people have been provided with care and treatment since the ‘Fight against epilepsy’ initiative was rolled out in the country between 2012 and 2016.

Focus

According to Prof. Adjei, although health authorities were focusing on convulsive epilepsy, there were other forms of epilepsy which were non-convulsive, including staring, repetitive blinking, chewing, swallowing and automatism.

Others were coma, prolonged apnea, cardiac arrest, dementia and higher brain dysfunction he said.

Non-convulsive epilepsy, he added, represented a considerable burden in prevalence which, if not treated, interfered significantly with a person’s functioning.

He said there were two principal deficits in the knowledge of the burden of the disease in the country — seizures, because they were easy to detect, and no data on the prevalence of the disease in the urban environment.

He said those placed a huge burden on the country which had little capacity to care for people with mental health and neurological disorders.

Pro. Adjei is also a team member of the country’s Epilepsy Pathway Innovation in Africa (EPInA) project which aims to improve the quality of life of people with epilepsy in sub-Saharan Africa by addressing all aspects of treatment pathway: prevention, diagnosis, treatment and awareness.

Between 2019 and 2024, the EPInA team is working in Accra, Nairobi, Kilifi and Mahenge to improve prevention, diagnosis, treatment and awareness of epilepsy.

He said so far there had been some awareness creation and diagnosis programmes in the Shai-Osudoku and the Ningo-Prampram districts in the Greater Accra Region.

He added that they were also working at improving care and the reduction of stigma of people with epilepsy within the two districts.

The WHO Regional Advisor on Mental Health and Substance Abuse, Dr Florence Baingana, said 85 per cent of the epilepsy burden in the world was in sub-Saharan Africa.

She said stroke was the largest contributor to neurological disability-adjusted life year (DALY) globally and in all African regions where meningitis ranked second in three out of four countries.

She said access to service and support, including essential, cost-effective medicines for neurological disorders, was insufficient, especially in low and middle-income countries.

The Head of the Health Unit of the WHO, Dr Tarun Dua Brain, said neurological disorders were the leading cause of DALY and also the second leading cause of death — 16·5 per cent or nine million deaths annually.

She said one in three persons worldwide had a neurological disorder at some point in his lifetime, while 78.5 per cent of deaths and 77.3 per cent of DALY due to neurological disorders were also in low and middle-income countries.

WHO Ghana

The WHO Representative in Ghana, Dr Francis Kasolo, said the organisation would continue to partner the government to work towards reducing the epilepsy treatment gap in the country.

He said a ‘Fight against epilepsy’ initiative rolled out in the country between 2012 and 2016 provided treatment and care for more than 2,700 people.

According to him, the WHO had expanded its work on epilepsy treatment and care with the introduction of a flagship programme, the Health Gap Action Programme (mhGAP), which he said was aimed at training non-specialist health workers to diagnose and manage mental, neurological and substance use conditions.

Source: Graphiconline.com

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