Exploring determinants of time to school re-entry after pediatric epilepsy surgery
Evangeline A. Huis in 't Veld, Olga Braams, Willem M. Otte, Peter van Rijen, Kees P.J. Braun, Renske Schappin

TL;DR
This study explores why some children return to school faster than others after epilepsy surgery, finding that surgery type and hospitalization length are key factors.
Contribution
The study identifies specific clinical and procedural factors influencing school re-entry time after pediatric epilepsy surgery.
Findings
Temporal surgery is significantly related to shorter time to school re-entry.
Longer hospitalization and presurgical educational counseling are linked to longer time to school re-entry.
These variables together explain 57% of the variance in school re-entry time.
Abstract
After epilepsy surgery, it varies when children re-enter school. The aim of this study was to identify determinants for this variation. Parents of 21 school-attending children participated in semi-structured interviews during their child’s hospitalization for epilepsy surgery and one year afterward (based on the standard neuropsychological post-surgical follow-up). The mean time to school re-entry was 10.7 weeks (SD = 6.3). One child did not attend school after one year, whilst the fastest child resumed school 2 weeks after surgery. We performed univariable linear regression models with bootstrapped R2 for all variables deemed theoretically or clinically relevant to school re-entry. We found that temporal surgery was significantly related to shorter time to school re-entry; and that longer hospitalization, and presurgical outpatient educational counseling were significantly related to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEpilepsy research and treatment · Adolescent and Pediatric Healthcare · Early Childhood Education and Development
