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Epilepsy Action Day at Queen’s Park September 24, 2013 Who we are Educate Engage Empower Dedicated to promoting independence and optimal quality of life for children and adults living with seizure disorders, by promoting information, awareness, support services, advocacy, education and research 2 Local Epilepsy Agencies Throughout Ontario 11 18 10 9 2 1 12 687 5 14 17 13 15 16 4 3 Epilepsy Area Offices 1. Peterborough and Area 2. Simcoe County 3. Kingston and Area 4. Ottawa-Carleton 5. Durham Region 6. Halton Peel Hamilton 7. Toronto 8. York Region 9. North Bay 10. Sault Ste. Marie and Algoma District 11. Timmins 12. Huron-Perth-Bruce-Grey 13. London and Area 14. Windsor and Area 15. Grand Erie 16. Niagara 17. Waterloo/Wellington 18. Thunder Bay – in development 3 Who we are • • • • The 18 epilepsy agencies in Ontario represent 65,000 people living with epilepsy and their families through a variety of supports and services including (but not limited to): Support and information via phone, online and walk-ins Brochures in doctor offices School advocacy/education Referrals to other community supports (community connectors) Public education displays / newsletters/ social media Employer advocacy Seizure First Aid training Support groups/peer support/counselling/social (psychosocial) Contributions of nearly 2,000 volunteers Agencies are funded through fundraised dollars including events, individual and corporate donations and grants No direct operational government funding is received 4 What is Epilepsy? What is Epilepsy? • A common brain disorder that is characterized by recurrent seizures • Epilepsy has no age, racial, geographic or socio-economic boundaries. What is a Seizure? – A brief disruption in normal brain activity that interferes with brain function – Type of seizure depends on which area of the brain is involved – People may experience an alteration in behaviour, consciousness, movement, perception and/or sensation 5 Treatment There is no cure… • Up to 70% of people with epilepsy respond to drug treatment • 30% of people with epilepsy still experience uncontrolled seizures Anti-seizure Drugs Surgery • Main treatment for epilepsy • For optimum seizure control, may be prescribed alone or in combination • Seizures are eliminated in only about 60% of cases with the use of one drug • Approximately 20% of patients are potential candidates but only 2% undergo surgery despite the fact that up to 80% of appropriately selected candidates can achieve seizure freedom with epilepsy surgery Other Treatments • Medical Diet Therapies • Vagal Nerve Stimulation (VNS) 6 The Impact of Epilepsy… • Affecting approximately 65,000 in Ontario* – 10,000 children – 55,000 adults • Approximately 6,500 new diagnosis each year* • Burden of Epilepsy – Social stigma – Psychiatric co-morbidity – Poor school performance, peer relationships – Higher unemployment – Loss of driver’s licence – Marriage and family less likely – Lower educational status – Higher mortality 1 in 100 Canadians have epilepsy 7 *OHTAC Recommendation: Care for Drug-Refractory Epilepsy in Ontario, July 2012 Key Issue: The Social Burden of Epilepsy • The social and psychological burden of epilepsy is greater than the medical burden • 1,342,857 disability days are associated with epilepsy every year in Ontario* • The productivity loss has been estimated at $139.23 million for the population living with epilepsy in Ontario* • According to an Ontario Health Survey, those living with epilepsy accessed psychology or social work services 3 times more then the general population *OHTAC Recommendation: Care for Drug-Refractory Epilepsy in Ontario, July 2012 (Data was calculated based on 1990-91 population and annual income) Direct Medical Costs 12.5% Indirect Social costs 87.5% The Burden of Neurological Diseases, Disorders and Injuries in Canada, 2007 8 Recommendation: The Social Burden of Epilepsy • Thank you for the work completed to date on the Ontario Epilepsy Strategy • Our role is to help people in Ontario living with epilepsy once they leave their doctors office • We want people to lead quality lives. People with epilepsy should be supported to have the highest quality of life possible. Patient education and self-management will reduce the cost to the province. Please advocate to your LHIN for funding for community-based epilepsy education 9 Key Issue: Education • Canadians with neurological conditions (like epilepsy) state that patient education needs to become a government priority *Dr. Jaglal, University of Toronto, 2013 • 36% of visits to London, Ontario emergency rooms due to seizures are potentially deferrable if persons with epilepsy are taught seizure first aid* Brain Matters Curriculum • Currently in 6 school boards Thinking about Epilepsy • Currently in 11 school boards *American Epilepsy Society Meeting Abstracts , 2007 • Teaching students what they can do to help an individual living with seizures in the school community ensures it is a safe environment for youth with epilepsy to learn and grow • Engaging students and teachers in seizure first aid is critical to ensure they know how to respond appropriately to a person having a seizure 10 Recommendation: Education • • Please advocate for epilepsy awareness curriculum and programs including: – Brain Matters program in Grade 12 Biology classrooms across the province – Thinking about Epilepsy in Grade 5 classrooms across the province Establish an inter-ministry panel to improve policy development and communication between related ministries as world leading brain research continues in Ontario: Ministry of Children and Youth Services Ministry of Research and Innovation Ministry of Health and Long Term Care Ministry of Education Ministry of Community and Social Services Please advocate to the Minister of Education to expand Epilepsy curriculum in schools across Ontario Ministry of Transportation 11 Key Issue: Drug Shortages & Access to New Treatments • • The impact on patients is serious, and in some cases life-threatening. Drug shortages cause longer wait times for patients in regular visits and procedures due to the time wasted and duplication of effort among healthcare professions in sourcing medications or finding alternatives Specific patient impacts include: 94% of pharmacists had difficulty – Compromising or delaying medical procedures sourcing a medication in their last – Forcing patients off safe, effective treatments week at work* – Long-term negative implications for patient health, including loss of seizure control *CPhA survey, 2013 – Loss of drivers licenses and loss of independence – Putting lives at risk through increased 66% of medication errors physicians felt – Employment difficulties drug shortages – Placing patients and families under huge are worse since mental stress 2010* – Greater risk of injury, accidents, 12 hospitalization or death *CMA survey, 2013 Recommendation: Drug Shortages & Access to New Treatments The Ontario Ministry of Health must put patients first by working with the federal government to find a solution to the serious and growing issue of drug shortages. Patients Need: • a focused effort to understand the root causes; • further transparency through a mandatory reporting system and a clarity of roles; • solutions that target both prevention and management of drug shortages including access to new treatments 13 Recommendation: Inter-ministry panel Establish an inter-ministry panel to improve policy development and communication between related ministries as world leading brain research continues in Ontario Ministry of Children and Youth Services Ministry of Research and Innovation Ministry of Health and Long Term Care Ministry of Education Ministry of Community and Social Services Ministry of Transportation 14 What Can You Do? People living with Epilepsy still need your continued help and action. Please help us advocate for the following: Funding for community-based epilepsy education • Your Local Health Integration Network • Hon. Deb Matthews • Hon. Teresa Piruzza • Hon. Ted McMeekin Expanded epilepsy awareness curriculum programs • Hon. Liz Sandals • Hon. Teresa Piruzza Work to find a solution to the serious problem of drug shortages • Hon. Deb Matthews 15 Thank you! For more information, please contact: Rozalyn Werner-Arcé, CAE Executive Director Epilepsy Ontario 905-474-9696 [email protected] 16