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Effect of Febrile Convulsion Training on Anxiety and Knowledge (FKT)

U

Uskudar University

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Febrile Convulsion

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06676020
UskudarUU

Details and patient eligibility

About

The research will be conducted to determine the effect of the training given to parents/caregivers on their knowledge, attitudes, practices and anxiety towards preventing febrile seizures in children. The research will be carried out as a randomised controlled experimental design in the Pediatric Emergency Department of Zeynep Kamil Women's and Children's Diseases Training and Research Hospital between October 2024 and October 2025.

Full description

INTRODUCTION Febrile convulsion (FC) is defined as a type of seizure with fever in the absence of any 6 months to 5 years of age and is the most common neurological disorder of infants and young children. Although FC occurs in 2-4% of the entire paediatric population, 90% of cases occur between 6 months and 3 months of age. Simple FCs, defined as generalised seizures lasting less than 15 minutes, and represent the majority of febrile convulsions that do not recur within 24 hours. The risk of mortality and morbidity in FC is very low and there is no detectable brain damage associated with the disease. Complications of febrile seizures in children include psychosocial effects, cognitive deficits, hospital bed occupancy, prolonged hospitalisation and increased healthcare costs. In a 12-year follow-up of neurological complications from febrile seizures, delayed neurological development and abnormalities were found in 20% of children, neurological deficits in 10% and learning disabilities in 5%. Simple measures such as controlling fever, washing feet and using antipyretics can prevent the incidence of the disease and febrile seizure complications in children. Due to the concurrent relatively high prevalence of this disease in children, the occurrence of two important phenomena, such as fever and seizures, causes severe anxiety to parents and may impair the quality of life of the family. Informing parents by providing adequate knowledge and awareness about fever and seizures is an important step in reducing anxieties and worries. In a study conducted by Sheringham on 154 parents with children in febrile seizures, 54.3% of individuals receiving training had appropriate knowledge and there was a direct correlation between parents' knowledge and practice. In Flury's study, 91% of parents experienced severe anxiety when faced with febrile seizures, and the intensity of anxiety was significantly higher in untrained individuals than in trained individuals. Parmer, in a study of 140 parents with children who had febrile seizures in India, noted that 59.3% of parents were not aware of this disease and only 20% knew the normal values of body temperature. Education of parents was emphasised in the study. In the literature, the number of studies aiming to determine the level of knowledge by providing education to families of children hospitalised with FC is insufficient. Therefore, in the light of the literature, the study will be conducted to determine the impact of education given to parents/carers due to their knowledge, attitudes, practices and concerns in the prevention of febrile seizures in children.

Enrollment

66 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

6 months to 5 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Referral to paediatric emergency department with febrile convulsion
  2. Children aged between 6 months and 5 years
  3. Voluntary participation of the child and his/her family in the study.

Exclusion criteria

Trial design

66 participants in 2 patient groups

Febrile Convulsion Group
Control Group

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Central trial contact

Tuğba KARAKUŞ TÜRKER K TKTURKER, Asistant Prof.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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