Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Part I The woman with epilepsy
- Part II Epilepsy diagnosis and treatment
- Part III Hormones and the brain
- Part IV Health challenges for women with epilepsy
- Part V Family planning, pregnancy, and parenting
- 18 Family planning and contraceptive choice
- 19 Pregnancy risks for the woman with epilepsy
- 20 Risks of birth defects in children born to mothers with epilepsy
- 21 Neurocognitive outcome in children of mothers with epilepsy
- 22 Parenting for women with epilepsy
- Part VI Living well with epilepsy
- Appendix: The Epilepsy Foundation's Campaign for Women's Health: bringing help and hope to women with epilepsy
- Index
- References
22 - Parenting for women with epilepsy
from Part V - Family planning, pregnancy, and parenting
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Part I The woman with epilepsy
- Part II Epilepsy diagnosis and treatment
- Part III Hormones and the brain
- Part IV Health challenges for women with epilepsy
- Part V Family planning, pregnancy, and parenting
- 18 Family planning and contraceptive choice
- 19 Pregnancy risks for the woman with epilepsy
- 20 Risks of birth defects in children born to mothers with epilepsy
- 21 Neurocognitive outcome in children of mothers with epilepsy
- 22 Parenting for women with epilepsy
- Part VI Living well with epilepsy
- Appendix: The Epilepsy Foundation's Campaign for Women's Health: bringing help and hope to women with epilepsy
- Index
- References
Summary
Mimi Callanan is an Epilepsy Nurse Specialist at the Stanford Comprehensive Epilepsy Center. She has spent her career caring for people with epilepsy and is familiar with the concerns common to any new parents with epilepsy. In this chapter, she discusses the seizure-related risks of parenting a small child and offers reasonable and helpful suggestions to make a home environment that ensures your child's safety. I think you'll find this chapter reassuring. In my practice I have often met women with epilepsy who were told early in their lives that they should not have children because they would not be fit parents. Some women have carried that advice around inside themselves for years without ever challenging it. It is hoped that this chapter will make clear that being a parent is hard and wonderful for everyone. Women with epilepsy have special challenges that require some additional accommodation – but, after that, it's every Mom for herself!
MJMThe birth of a new baby can be one of the most exciting and fulfilling events in a woman's life, yet it is also a time of many fears and anxiety. The birth of a new baby requires major adjustments in life. These events may cause changes in roles and responsibilities within the family structure.
Planning a family for the woman with epilepsy cannot begin too soon. With the onset of menstruation or when her epilepsy is first diagnosed, the woman with epilepsy can work with her physician to discuss pregnancy and childbearing.
Keywords
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- Information
- Women with EpilepsyA Handbook of Health and Treatment Issues, pp. 228 - 234Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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