Febrile Seizures: Perceptions and Knowledge of Parents of Affected and Unaffected Children

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Abstract

Abstract Febrile seizures (FS) in children are common. Little is known on parents’ perceptions and knowledge of FS. We interviewed parents of children aged 6 months to 6 years affected (FS-group, 65 parents) or unaffected by FS (unaffected group, 54 parents). Of the FS-group, 32% said they knew their child had a FS when the first event occurred. Of the FS-group, 89% described fear when the child had a seizure with a median intensity of 10/10 (Q25/Q75: 9/10). Of the FS-group, 77% said they (will) observe their child more carefully since the first seizure had happened, 63% (will) give antipyretics earlier at a median temperature of 38.2°C (100.8°F). Of the FS-group, 62% had not informed themselves about FS before the first event occurred (unaffected group: 54% had not informed themselves about FS so far). Of the FS-group, 20% would put a solid object in the mouth of a child having a seizure (unaffected group 39%), and 92% would administer an available anti-seizure rescue medication (unaffected group 78%). Of the FS-group, 71% stated children with FS might suffocate (unaffected group 70%). Conclusion: Information about FS and its management should be more widespread to improve parents’ coping and patient safety.

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00