Perceptions of Control in Adults with Epilepsy

  • Sarah Gehlert

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Summary: That psychosocial problems are extant in epilepsy is evidenced by a suicide rate among epileptic persons five times that of the general population and an unemployment rate estimated to be more than twice that of the population as a whole. External perceptions of control secondary to repeated episodes of seizure activity that generalize to the social sphere have been implicated as causes of these problems. The hypothesis that individuals who continue to have seizures become more and more external in perceptions of control was tested by a survey mailed to a sample of individuals with epilepsy in a metropolitan area of the Midwest. Dependent variables were scores on instruments measuring locus of control and attributional style. The independent variable was a measure of seizure control based on present age, age at onset, and length of time since last seizure. Gender, socioeconomic status, and certain parenting characteristics were included as control variables, as they are also known to affect perceptions of control. Analysis by multiple regression techniques supported the study's hypothesis when perceptions of control was conceptualized as learned helplessness for bad, but not for good, events. The hypothesis was not confirmed when perceptions of control was conceptualized as either general or health locus of control.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)81-88
    Number of pages8
    JournalEpilepsia
    Volume35
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Jan 1994

    Keywords

    • Epilepsy
    • Internal‐external control
    • Learned helplessness
    • Psychosocial
    • Social control
    • Social support

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