People with epilepsy are often perceived as violent

scientific article published on 22 November 2006

People with epilepsy are often perceived as violent is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1016/J.YEBEH.2006.10.008
P698PubMed publication ID17123866

P2093author name stringCarol S Camfield
Peter R Camfield
Kay Lee
T B Kate Collins
P2860cites workEmployers' attitudes to employment of people with epilepsy: still the same old story?Q28289842
Epilepsy and social identity: the stigma of a chronic neurological disorderQ29010813
Implicit social cognition: Attitudes, self-esteem, and stereotypes.Q29026786
Aggression and violence in patients with epilepsyQ35074451
Kentuckians' attitudes toward children with epilepsyQ39371810
Epilepsy and violence: medical and legal issuesQ39790882
Stigma and epilepsyQ40603168
Changes in public attitudes toward epilepsy in Hungary: results of surveys conducted in 1994 and 2000.Q43804490
Predictors for negative attitudes toward subjects with epilepsy: a representative survey in the general public in AustriaQ47278418
Knowledge of epilepsy and familiarity with this disorder in the U.S. population: results from the 2002 HealthStyles SurveyQ47365914
"The scarlet E": the presentation of epilepsy in the English language print mediaQ47672957
Epilepsy familiarity, knowledge, and perceptions of stigma: report from a survey of adolescents in the general population.Q50484643
Special report. The nature of aggression during epileptic seizuresQ70884209
Stigma, epilepsy, and quality of lifeQ73059637
An epilepsy questionnaire study of knowledge and attitudes in Canadian college studentsQ74284083
P433issue1
P304page(s)69-76
P577publication date2006-11-22
P1433published inEpilepsy BehaviorQ15746410
P1476titlePeople with epilepsy are often perceived as violent
P478volume10

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q40123058A lay carer's story about epilepsy in an urban South African context: they call it an illness of falling or an illness of fitting because a person shakes and eventually falls
Q47674033A randomized prospective pilot trial of Web-delivered epilepsy stigma reduction communications in young adults
Q34644872Epilepsy and education in developing countries: a survey of school teachers' knowledge about epilepsy and their attitude towards students with epilepsy in Northwestern Nigeria
Q37203422Epilepsy and stigma: an update and critical review
Q40744178Factors associated with perceived stigma among patients with epilepsy in Turkey.
Q33493662Health behaviors and conditions of persons with epilepsy: a bivariate analysis of 2006 BRFSS data
Q47336471Longitudinal investigation into implicit stigma of epilepsy among Japanese medical students before and after mass media coverage of car accidents associated with people with epilepsy
Q47629207Psychosocial factors associated with stigma in adults with epilepsy
Q90290496Public awareness and experiences associated with epilepsy in Japan, 2013-2017
Q81372698The differential effect of epilepsy labels on employer perceptions: report of a pilot study
Q36656375Transition from pediatric to adult epilepsy care: a difficult process marked by medical and social crisis
Q50702215YouTube: a gauge of public perception and awareness surrounding epilepsy.

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