All Relations between Epilepsy and belief

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
T Banerjee, G Banerje. Determinants of help-seeking behaviour in cases of epilepsy attending a teaching hospital in India: an indigenous explanatory model. The International journal of social psychiatry. vol 41. issue 3. 1996-10-23. PMID:8847202. belief in the physical cause of epilepsy and the participation of social network in decision making were, on the other hand, closely associated with the choice of practitioners of modern medicine. 1996-10-23 2023-08-12 Not clear
E L S. Classifications and epidemiologic considerations of epileptic seizures and epilepsy. Neuroimaging clinics of North America. vol 5. issue 4. 1996-03-05. PMID:8564281. an overview of the epidemiology of epileptic disorders shows that, contrary to the popular belief, they are primarily disorders of childhood; age-specific incidence rates of first unprovoked seizure and of epilepsy are highest in the elderly. 1996-03-05 2023-08-12 Not clear
S Tedman, E Thornton, G Bake. Development of a scale to measure core beliefs and perceived self efficacy in adults with epilepsy. Seizure. vol 4. issue 3. 1995-12-18. PMID:7582658. development of a scale to measure core beliefs and perceived self efficacy in adults with epilepsy. 1995-12-18 2023-08-12 Not clear
S Tedman, E Thornton, G Bake. Development of a scale to measure core beliefs and perceived self efficacy in adults with epilepsy. Seizure. vol 4. issue 3. 1995-12-18. PMID:7582658. a scale based on underlying core beliefs generated by the experience of epilepsy was developed. 1995-12-18 2023-08-12 Not clear
S Tedman, E Thornton, G Bake. Development of a scale to measure core beliefs and perceived self efficacy in adults with epilepsy. Seizure. vol 4. issue 3. 1995-12-18. PMID:7582658. core beliefs are central to both the development and maintenance of anxiety and depression in epilepsy patients and need to be addressed in any attempts at remedial intervention. 1995-12-18 2023-08-12 Not clear
M J Eadi. The understanding of epilepsy across three millennia. Clinical and experimental neurology. vol 31. 1995-12-12. PMID:7586660. over nearly all the subsequent centuries the popular belief has been that epilepsy is a disorder of supernatural origin, and to some extent such ideas have carried over into medical thought. 1995-12-12 2023-08-12 Not clear
M J Eadi. The understanding of epilepsy across three millennia. Clinical and experimental neurology. vol 31. 1995-12-12. PMID:7586660. in western civilisation, the long dominant belief was that epilepsy was due to possession by a devil or a demon, an interpretation given authoritative support by the miracle story of the cure of the epileptic child which is recorded in all three synoptic gospels. 1995-12-12 2023-08-12 Not clear
S K Gambhir, V Kumar, P D Singhi, R C Goe. Public awareness, understanding & attitudes toward epilepsy. The Indian journal of medical research. vol 102. 1995-10-24. PMID:7558208. eighty five per cent of the respondents were not aware of the cause of epilepsy or had wrong beliefs. 1995-10-24 2023-08-12 Not clear
A T Berg, S Shinna. The contributions of epidemiology to the understanding of childhood seizures and epilepsy. Journal of child neurology. vol 9 Suppl 2. 1995-02-02. PMID:7806782. over the last 25 to 30 years, epidemiologic studies have demonstrated that, contrary to these earlier beliefs, the prognosis of most childhood seizures and epilepsy is excellent. 1995-02-02 2023-08-12 Not clear
W B Matuja, H T Rwiz. Knowledge, attitude and practice (KAP) towards epilepsy in secondary school students in Tanzania. The Central African journal of medicine. vol 40. issue 1. 1994-10-13. PMID:8082145. their belief in the contagiousness of epilepsy was a major reason for discriminating against an epileptic child or person playing with other children; going to school; sharing the same plate or bed and as a marriage partner and this was significantly more so in the lower than upper classes. 1994-10-13 2023-08-12 Not clear
B Shaba, M MacLachlan, S C Carr, A Age. Palliative versus curative beliefs regarding tropical epilepsy as a function of traditional and medical attributions. The Central African journal of medicine. vol 39. issue 8. 1994-08-02. PMID:7517345. palliative versus curative beliefs regarding tropical epilepsy as a function of traditional and medical attributions. 1994-08-02 2023-08-12 Not clear
B Shaba, M MacLachlan, S C Carr, A Age. Palliative versus curative beliefs regarding tropical epilepsy as a function of traditional and medical attributions. The Central African journal of medicine. vol 39. issue 8. 1994-08-02. PMID:7517345. although epilepsy may be successfully managed with appropriate medication, in africa epileptics are often vilified, sometimes because of traditional beliefs about the illness. 1994-08-02 2023-08-12 Not clear
B Shaba, M MacLachlan, S C Carr, A Age. Palliative versus curative beliefs regarding tropical epilepsy as a function of traditional and medical attributions. The Central African journal of medicine. vol 39. issue 8. 1994-08-02. PMID:7517345. we investigated the strength of beliefs which 112 rural malawians held regarding traditional and medical explanations for the cause, treatment and cure of epilepsy. 1994-08-02 2023-08-12 Not clear
B Shaba, M MacLachlan, S C Carr, A Age. Palliative versus curative beliefs regarding tropical epilepsy as a function of traditional and medical attributions. The Central African journal of medicine. vol 39. issue 8. 1994-08-02. PMID:7517345. knowledge of a local medical facility for the treatment of epilepsy was also positively related to the belief that epilepsy is curable. 1994-08-02 2023-08-12 Not clear
B Shaba, M MacLachlan, S C Carr, A Age. Palliative versus curative beliefs regarding tropical epilepsy as a function of traditional and medical attributions. The Central African journal of medicine. vol 39. issue 8. 1994-08-02. PMID:7517345. the ability of people to simultaneously hold medical and traditional beliefs about epilepsy was noted. 1994-08-02 2023-08-12 Not clear
T Butau, J Piachau. Knowledge and beliefs about epilepsy in mothers of children with epilepsy: a view from a developing country. The Central African journal of medicine. vol 39. issue 9. 1994-08-02. PMID:8020087. knowledge and beliefs about epilepsy in mothers of children with epilepsy: a view from a developing country. 1994-08-02 2023-08-12 Not clear
M J Eadi. XIXth century pre-Jacksonian concepts of epileptogenesis. Clinical and experimental neurology. vol 29. 1994-03-31. PMID:1343867. by the beginning of the xixth century the old belief that epilepsy was due to demonic possession or to malevolent influences emanating from a variety of sources had largely given way to an acceptance that the disorder was a physical illness which arose in the brain, though in some not very precisely defined way. 1994-03-31 2023-08-11 Not clear
S F Berkovic, R A Howell, D A Hay, J L Hoppe. Twin birth is not a risk factor for seizures. Neurology. vol 43. issue 12. 1994-01-13. PMID:8255449. there is a belief that perinatal factors are a major cause of epilepsy. 1994-01-13 2023-08-12 Not clear
L D Kramer, G W Pledger, M Kami. Prototype antiepileptic drug clinical development plan. Epilepsia. vol 34. issue 6. 1994-01-06. PMID:8243359. antiepileptic drug (aed) development has been generally difficult owing to many factors: regulatory requirements for demonstration of efficacy and safety, subject availability, traditional trial designs, and physicians' beliefs about epilepsy and its treatment. 1994-01-06 2023-08-12 human
L E Westbrook, L J Bauman, S Shinna. Applying stigma theory to epilepsy: a test of a conceptual model. Journal of pediatric psychology. vol 17. issue 5. 1992-12-23. PMID:1432485. results showed that the data supported some hypotheses tested in the model: (a) seizure type and seizure frequency predicted low self-esteem, and (b) the belief that epilepsy is stigmatizing predicted low self-esteem. 1992-12-23 2023-08-11 human