Purpose: Seizure severity has been investigated using multiple tools over the years, and its defining features continue to be debated. Severity ratings are necessary for medical, psychological, and epidemiologic investigations. Adults with epilepsy have been evaluated more than youth with epilepsy.
Methods: Seizure severity was evaluated as part of a larger study that included youth and caregiver self-report measures of the emotional and social variables that occur in epilepsy.
Results: The results indicate that a longer recovery time from the last seizure and a longer duration of seizure influence how severe a caregiver judges seizures. The usual elements such as type of epilepsy, frequency of seizures, and most recent seizure were not significantly related to severity rating. Behavior ratings were also not related to severity rating.
Discussion: Clinicians often rely heavily on caregiver information during clinic visits to help inform treatment decisions; therefore, a standard measure of seizure severity from the caregivers' perception has clinical utility. Rather than assuming what makes a seizure severe to a parent, more research should be conducted on what elements contribute to severity, as judged by both the parent and youth.