Elsevier

Seizure

Volume 16, Issue 4, June 2007, Pages 320-323
Seizure

Prejudice towards chronic diseases: Comparison among epilepsy, AIDS and diabetes

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.seizure.2007.01.008Get rights and content
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Summary

Introduction

Diseases have an additional negative meaning but with different magnitude. Epilepsy is considered a stigmatizing condition; however its magnitude is unknown in our society, a limited-resource country, as Brazil.

Purpose

To compare the stigma perception of epilepsy to other two chronic conditions: AIDS and diabetes in the city of Campinas, Brazil.

Methods

We interviewed people in two situations: on the streets (145 randomly selected people) and during a Meeting of Epilepsy (86 people). We asked three questions “What score would you rate for the prejudice that general population has towards: epilepsy, AIDS and diabetes”. The score ranges from 0 (no prejudice) to 10 (maximum prejudice), and was displayed to the interviewee in the format of a ruler.

Results

The median (upper and lower 95% confidence interval) prejudice score of lay people was 9 (7.8–8.6) for AIDS, 7 (6.1–7.0) for epilepsy and 2 (2.5–3.5) for diabetes. The median prejudice score of people with epilepsy and relatives was 9 (6.9–8.1) for AIDS, 7 (6.4–7.5) for epilepsy and 2.5 (2.9–4.2) for diabetes.

Discussion

There is a difference in the perception of prejudice towards people with chronic diseases; AIDS had the highest level of stigma and diabetes the lowest, and epilepsy was in the intermediate position but closer to AIDS.

Keywords

Stigma
Epilepsy
Scale
Prejudice
Seizure

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