The adolescent's search for self-discovery and identity in physical, psychosocial, cognitive and emotional areas may become more complex with epilepsy disease management. The adolescent's burden of treatment compliance may lead to poor adherence to the disease and worsen short- and long-term health outcomes. Disease self-management in epilepsy represents the processes required for disease knowledge, seizure control, medication adherence, increasing social support and quality of life, and reducing the negative effects of the disease. Educational training implemented in this period have an effect that increases motivation to gain skills to adapt to the disease. This model argues that knowledge is a basis for behaviour change, but it is not sufficient alone. However, it is argued that people will have the necessary behavioural skills when they are well informed and motivated for effective action. It is aimed to find a statistically significant difference from the scales (Epilepsy Knowledge Test for Adolescents, Seizure Self-Efficacy Status Scale in Children with Epilepsy, Multidimensional Perceived Level of Social Support Scale, Child's Attitude Towards His/her Disease Scale) at the end of the training of adolescents who received an 8-week training program.
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Change in the mean score of adolescents in the epilepsy disease knowledge test
Timeframe: an average of 3 month
Change in the mean score of adolescents in the Seizure Self-Efficacy Scale in Children with Epilepsy
Timeframe: an average of 3 month
Change in the mean score of adolescents in the Multidimensional Perceived Social Support Scale
Timeframe: an average of 3 month
Change in the mean score of adolescents in theChild's Attitude Towards His Own Illness Scale
Timeframe: an average of 3 month