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Prevention Research Centers (PRC)

Managing Epilepsy Well: Network for Epilepsy Self-Management

Principal Investigator
Colleen K. DiIorio
cdiiori@sph.emory.edu

Project Identifier
Managing Epilepsy Well: Network for Epilepsy Self-Management Coordinating Center—SIP 05-07 and Managing Epilepsy Well: Network for Epilepsy Self-Management—SIP 06-07

Status: Active

Emory University: Prevention Research Center (Coordinating Center)

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston: University of Texas Prevention Research Center

Topics:
Epilepsy

The Managing Epilepsy Well (MEW) network is intended to address research priority areas identified during Living Well with Epilepsy II, the second national conference on public health and epilepsy, that relate to self-management. The network will develop and implement a coordinated applied research agenda; conduct research activities that promote self-management and quality of life in home, community, or clinical settings; and work with public health , mental health, social services agencies, and other partners to implement and accelerate the dissemination of activities. The goal of the MEW network is to increase the number of tested epilepsy self-management programs available to health care providers and members of the epilepsy community.

Individual Center Projects

 

Evaluating the effectiveness of two epilepsy self-management programs
Emory University: Prevention Research Center

Two epilepsy self-management interventions, WebEase and Project UPLIFT, will be tested with older adolescents and adults with epilepsy. WebEase is a 6-week Web-based program comprising three 2-week modules on medication, stress, and sleep management. Researchers will determine if users of WebEase show improvement in epilepsy-related knowledge, medication adherence, stress management, sleep time, and quality of life. Project UPLIFT is an 8-week program that will be delivered by the Internet or by telephone to people with epilepsy who want to reduce their depression. Researchers will determine if participants show improvement in depressive symptoms; self-perceptions of quality of life, satisfaction with life, self-compassion, purpose in life, sleep time and quality; and knowledge and skills related to mindfulness and depression.

Assessing the Effects of Epilepsy Self-Management
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston: University of Texas Prevention Research Center

Results from this study are intended to form a foundation for developing effective behavioral interventions to improve self-management for people with epilepsy. The project will examine predictors of self-management — attitudes and social, behavioral, and environmental factors — and their associations with treatment adherence (e.g., blood anti-epileptic drug [AED] levels and days missed taking AEDS), and health outcomes (e.g., emergency room visits, seizure control, quality of life, and functional status) in a sociodemographically diverse population of people with epilepsy. The researchers will work with a cohort of 450 patients with epilepsy already identified at two clinical sites in Houston. The data on self-management and drug levels will be merged with the longitudinal data on drug-taking behavior, acute health care use, and health outcomes.

 

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