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The following article is reprinted with permission from The Epilepsy Foundation.
When the only symptoms of a seizure disorder are frequent episodes of
blank staring and unresponsiveness, the teacher is often the first adult
to notice them. Many children have been diagnosed and successfully treated
because of an alert teacher.
The following are the most common signs of possible seizure activity:
Observing a single instance of any of the these actions is no proof
a child has a seizure disorder. It could be caused by other things.
But if the teacher sees a pattern of this behavior, it should be followed
up in whatever manner the school requires when student health is at
issue.
Discussion with the school nurse or principal, followed by a brief
report to the parents, is one way to proceed.
Only a doctor can diagnose epilepsy, of course, so the teacher's
role should be to tell the parents what has been observed and suggest
that they may want to mention these episodes to the child's doctor since
they seem to be interfering with his performance at school. Leave it
at that. Don't offer a diagnosis.
If a teacher observes the seizure, a written report of the sequence
of events can be very helpful to the doctor.