Outreach & Engaged Scholarship
Primary Theme: Global Health
While epilepsy affects over 50 million people globally, three of four people in low-resource countries do not get care for this treatable condition. In Uganda, stigma is pervasive: one in five people believes epilepsy is contagious, and there are strong beliefs in supernatural or witchcraft-based causes, treatments and even inoculation. In 2017-18, a Bass Connections project team began work to identify, predict and address the barriers to epilepsy care in Uganda. The team implemented a mixed-methods design to collect data examining cultural and practical barriers to reaching biomedical care. Team members designed a quantitative survey to examine the predictors of care patterns and delays, and collected focus group and interview data among all epilepsy stakeholder groups, including patients and families, traditional healers, pastoral healers, neurologists and psychiatrists. The objective for the 2018-19 Bass Connections project team is to address the question, Given that we now know potent predictors of care-seeking behavior, how will we systematically address the barriers to epilepsy care in Uganda through well designed, culturally relevant and sensitive interventions?