Opinion Article
Volume 2 Issue 6 - 2018
Route Evaluation of Domestic Violence and Epileptic Seizure ("Fit") Experience Among Recently Married Women Residing in Slums Communities’ Pharmaceutical Institutions in Pune District, India
ICMR Post Doc Indian Council of Medical Research New Delhi
*Corresponding Author: Rahul Hajare, ICMR Post Doc Indian Council of Medical Research New Delhi India.
Received: June 05, 2018; Published: July 05, 2018
Abstract
An attack of an acute disease or the sudden appearance of over symptom, such as coughing and convulsion accepted as ‘’Fit’’. In 2015, epilepsy affected 1.2 percent of the population in the United States, or 3.4 million people, including 3 million adults and 470,000 children. Every function in the human body has triggered by messaging systems in our brain. Epilepsy results when this system has disrupted due to faulty domestic violations. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) describe epilepsy as "a common neurological condition that kept under control and medically care. It has mainly control slowing advance, rather, it must submit their claims to rigorous non-scientific culture.
Introduction
In many cases, the exact cause has not known. Some people have inherited genetic factors that make epilepsy more likely to occur. Other factors that may increase the risk include: head trauma, for instance, during a car crash, stroke infectious diseases, for instance, AIDS and viral encephalitis, developmental disorders, for instance, autism or neurofibromatosis. It has most likely to appear in children under 2 years of age very rare, middle age and adults over 65 years. What a patient with epilepsy experiences during a seizure will depend on which part of the brain has affected, and how widely and quickly it spreads from that area. The incomplete note of medical sciences that the condition "has not well understood." Often, no specific cause can be identified. Intimate partner violence (IPV), defined as the physical, sexual, psychological abuse, and control perpetrated against an intimate partner, has highly prevalent and cannot ignore for epilepsy epidemic. Approximately one in ten of women reporting physical and abuse by their partner during their lifetime, violation of human rights that often results in physical injury can lead neurological disturbances (trauma). Women who experience IPV have higher odds of depression, anxiety and other mental health disorders, [1] sexually transmitted infections including HIV, [2] chronic pain disorders and gynaecologic morbidity among other chronic disease states lead the epileptic seizure ("fit"). Additionally, their children suffer from greater symptom of epilepsy morbidity and mortality. In India, although national estimates suggest decreasing frequency, one in three women still report having been abused by their spouses during their lifetime.
Further, this figure has likely an underestimate of the abuse women suffer post-epileptic seizer or other members of the husband's family, hereafter termed domestic violence (DV). Women who reside in India's slums pharmaceutical institutions are among those at greatest risk of high fever with epilepsy-like symptoms. While the disparate figures between slum- and non-slum residing communities may be in part artefactual due to shame induced underreporting in higher income communities, factors that drive increased DV perpetration and compel women to remain in abusive relationships are likely disproportionately greater in slum to slum communities. Women in slum communities may be more likely to experience DV with periods of extreme muscle weakness because their partners and families into which they marry suffer greater stress (i.e. related to inadequate finances, crowding, limited resources, low update oxygen and poor sanitation), discrimination, and subordination, reside in communities where normalization and acceptance of DV has greater, alcohol use has greater, have weakened immune support systems that do not allow them to develop and exercise positive coping mechanisms, and epileptic disorder use as means of countering feelings of powerlessness.
Further, in Pune district slum communities, at the time of marriage, many women transition from newly enter the slums from surrounding rural areas; thus, the differences in upbringing within the couple may also influence marital expectations and prompt conflict. Further, women residing in slums may be more likely to stay in panic attacks because of poorer knowledge of and access to health support services, on time medicine and increased economic dependence, [3] weaker support systems, stronger perceptions of hopelessness, and residence in environments where DV and other forms of psychogenic seizures occurs with frequency and acceptance willingly [4]. The risk imposed by these factors has compounded by social sanctions that encourage women to weaken ties with (and thus, diminish the social support of) natal family members and their community post-marriage, that limit the time the couple spends together alone to develop their relationship both pre-and post-marriage, and external pressure on the couple (i.e. fertility). Further, women's financial empowerment through employment, a seemingly logical solution, has counter intuitively been shown to be associated with increased DV experience through challenging traditional gender roles and serving as a threat to male partners. Thus, there are currently cure for most types of correlate Domestic Violation epilepsy.
However, surgery can stop some kinds of seizure from occurring, and in many cases, the condition can be managed. An underlying correctable brain condition has causing the seizures, sometimes surgery can stop them. Epilepsy has diagnosed; the doctor will prescribe seizure-preventing drugs or anti-epileptic drugs. The majority of AEDs are taken orally. The type of seizure the patient has having will decide which drug the doctor may prescribe. Patients do not all react in the same way to drugs, but AEDs appear to help control seizures in 70 percent of cases. Some drugs may stop seizures in one patient, but not in another. Even when the right drug has found, it can take some time to find the ideal dose. Drugs do not work; the next option could be surgery, a special diet or VNS (vagus nerve stimulation). The doctor's aim has to prevent further seizures from occurring, while at the same time avoiding side effects so that the patient can lead a normal, active, and productive life. A community-tailored approach that recognizes the structural factors of slum environments that shape DV risk reduce. National evidence suggests that almost two-thirds of women who report DV with Fit, state the abuse had begun within the first two years of marriage, [5] underscoring the need for such prevention efforts to occur pre- or immediately post-marriage. To date, few studies have examined risk factors for DV experience among women residing in slum communities in India. Those who have, identified the following risk factors: age, low educational attainment of self and spouse, young age of marriage, having a love marriage versus arranged marriage, additional dowry request from marital family, employment, changes in her own or her spouse's employment status, residence in a joint family, renting versus owning one's residence, fewer rooms in the household and shared bathrooms, accepting attitudes toward wife beating.
Discussion
Epilepsy has neurological condition that can kept under control. Drugs commonly used to treat epilepsy include: sodium valproate and carbamazepine. Consultation authenticated hospitals or government hospitals, indoor treatment at government and empanelled private hospitals and investigations at government and empanelled diagnostic centres.
References
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Citation:
Rahul Hajare. “Route Evaluation of Domestic Violence and Epileptic Seizure (“Fit”) Experience Among Recently Married
Women Residing in Slums Communities’ Pharmaceutical Institutions in Pune District, India”. Chronicles of Pharmaceutical Science 2.6
(2018): 702-704.
Copyright: © 2018 Rahul Hajare. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.