Antiepileptic Therapies in the Mifi Province in Cameroon
- 1 April 2000
- Vol. 41 (4) , 432-439
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1528-1157.2000.tb00185.x
Abstract
Summary: Purpose: To evaluate the availability and accessibility of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) in two health districts in Cameroon. Methods: The study included 33 patients with epilepsy, 26 physicians, 13 private pharmacists, eight hospital pharmacists, three distributors, and eight traditional healers. Structured questionnaires were used to assess the knowledge of the disease, treatment accessibility, the methods of prescriptions, and the availability and the frequency of delivery of drugs. Results: Only one of 33 patients did not take modern treatment; 91% of the patients were followed up by a traditional healer, and 78%, by an hospital physician. Phenobarbitone (PB) was the most frequently prescribed drug by 69% of the doctors; 54% of the physicians considered the traditional therapies to be incompatible with modern drug treatment. By pharmacists, PB was delivered regularly. Other drugs went out of stock frequently. The number of packages in stock varied significantly directly with the frequency of delivery. The mean price per package and the mean number of packages in stock were higher in the public hospital pharmacies than in the private pharmacies. A majority of healers explained epilepsy as the presence of excess foam in the abdomen. The remedies proposed were to stop foam secretion. Conclusions: Availability of AEDs was quite high, but with no strict correspondence between the rate of prescriptions and the supply of the drugs.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Onchocerciasis and Epilepsy: A Matched Case-Control Study in the Central African RepublicAmerican Journal of Epidemiology, 1999
- Antiepileptic Drug Treatment in Rural Africa: Involving the CommunityTropical Doctor, 1998
- Epilepsy in Developing CountriesEpilepsia, 1997
- Epilepsy in the Tropics: II. Clinical Presentations, Pathophysiology, Immunologic Diagnosis, Economics, and TherapyEpilepsia, 1996
- Evaluation of epilepsy management in a developing country: a prospective study of 407 patientsActa Neurologica Scandinavica, 1996
- Use of Alternative Medicine by Patients with Epilepsy: A Survey of 265 Epileptic Patients in a Developing CountryEpilepsia, 1994
- Epilepsy in Developing Countries: A Review of Epidemiological, Sociocultural, and Treatment AspectsEpilepsia, 1988
- A Household Study of Illness Prevalence and Health Care Preferences in a Rural District of CameroonInternational Journal of Epidemiology, 1977