Prevalence of epilepsy in prisoners: systematic review
Seena Fazel, Evangelos Vassos,
John
Danesh
Henry Maudsley, doyen of 19th century British psychiatry, believed that people with epilepsy were particularly prone to violence and
criminality,1
a view shared by many leading psychiatrists and neurologists
today.2
Epilepsy is typically claimed to be about two to four times more common
in prisoners than in the general population, but the epidemiological
evidence cited to support this claim is of uncertain validity. Previous
surveys of prisoners have involved unrepresentative populations, proxy
measures (such as use of anticonvulsant drugs), and
secondhand respondents (such as prison medical officers). To
help clarify the evidence, we conducted a meta-analysis of
available surveys based on personal clinical interviews in
general prison
populations.
Methods
and resultsWe sought studies of the prevalence
of epilepsy, fits, convulsion, or seizures in approximately general
prison populations (that is, excluding studies of prisoners referred
for neuropsychiatric assessment) reported between January 1966 and
August 2001 by computer based searches (Embase, PsycINFO, Medline),
scanning of relevant reference lists, and hand searching of forensic
psychiatry journals and other relevant journals. We used combinations
of keywords relating to epilepsy (for example, epilep*, seizure,
fit, convulsion) and to prisoners (for example, inmate, sentenced,
remand, detainee, felon). Eligible studies reported on an adult history
of chronic epilepsy (defined as a condition characterised by two or
more recurrent seizures, unprovoked by any immediately identifiable
cause).w1-w7 Two investigators independently
extracted the following data according to a fixed protocol:
geographical location, year of survey, number of prisoners, sampling
strategy, response rate, diagnostic criteria, mean age and sex of
prisoners, and number of prisoners reporting a history of epilepsy in
adult life. Discrepancies were resolved by discussion and by
correspondence with authors of surveys. Calculation of confidence
intervals and data synthesis involved standard methods, as previously
described.3
We
identified seven relevant surveys (3111
prisoners).w1-w7 Reported sampling strategies
included complete sampling of entire prisons (584
prisoners),w2,w7 stratified random sampling
(2027),w1,w4 and inclusion of consecutive prisoners
(500).w3,w5,w6 Six studies reported response rates in excess
of 90%,w1-w6 and one study reported a response
in excess of 75%.w7 All studies were based on
clinical interviews (none was supplemented by neurological examination
or other medical investigation). All respondents were sentenced
inmates, the weighted mean age was 29 years, 90% were men, and
22% had been convicted of violent offences. Three surveys were
conducted in the United Kingdom (2297 prisoners),w1,w3,w4
two in the United States (591),w2,w6 and one each in Canada
(100)w5 and Nigeria (93).w7 Overall, 23 of the
prisoners in these surveys reported a history of chronic
epilepsy, yielding a prevalence rate of
0.7% (95% confidence interval 0.5% to 1.1%)
(figure), and we found no
significant heterogeneity among the seven surveys
(χ26=8.3;
P>0.10).
Prevalence of epilepsy in prisoners found in seven surveys
Comment
In contrast with claims widely published in standard texts and other
sources,2
this synthesis of seven surveys involving more than 3000 participants
in general prison populations indicates that only about 1%
reported a history of chronic epilepsy. The prevalence rate in general
populations is also approximately 1% for men aged 25-35
years, according to community based surveys that used definitions of
epilepsy most comparable to those used in the studies reviewed
here.4
Any publication bias in the reports contributing to this
meta-analysis would probably tend to exaggerate the prevalence
rates of epilepsy among prisoners, which reinforces our conclusion that
the available epidemiological evidence provides no good support for the
alleged link between epilepsy and
criminality.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Warne Hospital, Oxford OX3 7JX
Seena Fazel, research fellow,
Evangelos Vassos, senior house officer
Department of Public Health and Primary Care, Institute of Health Sciences, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 2SR
John Danesh, professor of epidemiology and medicine
The following investigators provided additional data: S Agbahowe,
G Hannon, N Singleton, C Taylor. C Meux commented helpfully.
P Appleby plotted the figure.
Contributors: All of the authors were involved in the design, conduct, analysis, and interpretation of the study. SF will act as
guarantor.
Funding: SF was supported by a grant from the Wellcome Trust. JD was supported by the Raymond and Beverly Sackler Research Award in the Medical Sciences.
Competing interests: None declared.
studentBMJ 2002;10:259-302 August ISSN 0966-6494
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1873.
- Toone B. Epilepsy. In: Gelder M, Lopez-Ibor J, Andreasen N, eds.
The new Oxford textbook of psychiatry. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000:1153-7.
- Fazel S, Danesh J. Serious mental disorder among 23 000 prisoners: a systematic review of 62 surveys. Lancet
2002;359:545-50.
- Sander G, Shorvon S. Epidemiology of the epilepsies. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry
1996;61:433-43.
- Rowan A, Hyman H, French JH. The prevalence of epilepsy in a large heterogeneous urban population (The Bronx, New York, January 8, 1975). Trans Am Neurol Assoc 1976;101:281-3.