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Epilepsy at a large psychiatric hospital: survey and audit of its management

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 June 2014

Camilla Haw*
Affiliation:
St Andrew's Healthcare, Billing Road, Northampton, NN1 5DG, United Kingdom
*
*Correspondence Email: chaw@standrew.co.uk

Abstract

Objectives: Although epilepsy and psychiatric disorder are known to be associated, little is known about the nature of epilepsy in psychiatric inpatients and how well psychiatrists manage psychiatric patients with epilepsy. The aim of this study was to describe the nature of epilepsy in patients at a large specialist independent psychiatric hospital and to audit the management of epilepsy using patients' records.

Method: Cross-sectional survey of inpatients and audit of clinical documents. Audit standards were derived from good clinical practice and UK guidelines.

Results: In total, 83/488 (17%) patients had a life-time history of epileptic seizures and 67 (14%) were receiving anti-epileptic drugs. The prevalence of epilepsy was 37% among brain injury patients, compared with 10-11% in adult male and female forensic patients and in the elderly and 2% in adolescents. Generalised tonic-clonic seizures predominated. Common aetiological factors were: traumatic brain injury, antipsychotics, cerebral hypoxia, cerebrovascular disease and learning disability. In 53/67 (79%) cases the care plan stated the patient had epilepsy but in only 20 (30%) was the seizure type recorded. For 30 (45%) there was no history of how epilepsy had been diagnosed. Of those patients with a history of status epilepticus, 5/15 (33%) had a readily accessible emergency treatment plan. The patient's last seizure was incompletely documented in 29/44 (66%) cases, while for only 7/67 (10%) patients was there documented evidence of a review of epilepsy management within the past year.

Conclusions: Epilepsy was common in this group of psychiatric inpatients. Documentation and management needed improvement and to be in line with national guidelines.

Type
Audit
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011

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