Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Epilepsy 'Treatment Gap' In Sierra Leone A Result Of Stigma, Lack Of Resources, Experts Say
In Sierra Leone, "one of Africa's poorest countries, ... scarce health care resources and the stigma surrounding epilepsy add up to a 'treatment gap' of more than 90 percent -- meaning that fewer than 10 percent of the estimated 60,000 to 100,000 Sierra Leoneans with epilepsy are getting the treatment they need," the New York Times reports. "Epilepsy treatment gaps are driven largely by low income and rural location, making sub-Saharan Africa a treatment-gap hot spot. Treatment in Sierra Leone is not expensive," but "[t]he costs of untreated epilepsy, on the other hand, are enormous, especially in lost productivity," the newspaper writes.
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