Educating lay carers of people with learning disability in epilepsy awareness and in the use of rectal diazepam: a suggested teaching protocol for use by healthcare personnel.

1999 
: A high proportion of people with learning disabilities have epilepsy and often their epilepsy is of an intractable nature. Nurses within the large learning disability institutions are obliged, on a regular basis, to administer rectal diazepam to control these patients' serial seizures. As a result of the "community care" initiative, the process of discharging adult people from institutions into care settings in the community is underway. Consequently, and increasingly, the learning disabled are being cared for by non-medical/non-nursing (lay) community home carers who are required to gain a working knowledge of epilepsy as well as a degree of proficiency in the first aid management of seizures and in the use of rectal diazepam. Medical and nursing staff involved in the care of adults with learning disability are now liable to be approached by lay care organisations for appropriate training. This article, therefore, will outline the training programme employed at Gogarburn Hospital to educate lay community care staff in general epilepsy awareness and in the administration of rectal diazepam to adults with learning disability and epilepsy. This programme could be adapted and implemented by colleagues in their own areas.
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