Children with febrile seizures do not consume excess health care resources.

BACKGROUND Febrile seizures are benign but so terrifying for parents that they may subsequently view their affected children as "vulnerable". Children viewed as vulnerable may be brought to medical attention more frequently. We examined subsequent hospitalizations and physician visits during a 6- to 7 1/2-year period for a group of children who had participated in a case-control study of initial febrile seizures. METHODS Individual data from a regional cohort of 75 children with a first febrile seizure and 150 febrile and 150 afebrile controls were linked to 2 comprehensive provincial health services databases-a hospital admissions/ separations database and a physician services database. RESULTS Linkage was achieved for 98% of the study cohort, with heath care utilization data for 6 to 7 1/2 years available for 96%. Children with febrile seizures had nearly identical rates of subsequent hospitalization compared with age-matched controls (chi2 test, P = .88). An excess of day-surgery visits for primarily otolaryngologic procedures was seen for the febrile seizure patients 0 to 12 months after their initial febrile seizure (chi2 test, P < .001). During the next 6 to 7 1/2 years, the febrile seizure patients had nearly identical rates of physician visits (chi2 test, P = .15); however, they had more visits to otolaryngologists in the first 3 to 9 months after the febrile seizure (chi2 test, P < .001), but fewer visits to pediatricians during the next 1 to 4 years (chi2 test, P < .001). CONCLUSIONS Children with febrile seizures have nearly identical rates of hospital and physician services utilization compared with controls. This supports the hypothesis that febrile seizures are benign, and that parents recover from their initial anxiety and do not consider their children vulnerable to additional illness in the years that follow.

[1]  O. Kremp [Long term intellectual and behavioral outcomes of children with febrile convulsions]. , 1998, Revue d'epidemiologie et de sante publique.

[2]  C J Shonkoff,et al.  Reactions to the threatened loss of a child: a vulnerable child syndrome, by Morris Green, MD, and Albert A. Solnit, MD, Pediatrics, 1964;34:58-66. , 1998, Pediatrics.

[3]  M Thomasgard,et al.  Parental overprotection and its relation to perceived child vulnerability. , 1997, The American journal of orthopsychiatry.

[4]  M. Thomasgard,et al.  Differences in Health Care Utilization Between Parents Who Perceive Their Child as Vulnerable versus Overprotective Parents , 1996, Clinical pediatrics.

[5]  P. Leaf,et al.  The child vulnerability scale: an instrument to measure parental perceptions of child vulnerability. , 1996, Journal of pediatric psychology.

[6]  M. Uhari,et al.  Effect of acetaminophen and of low intermittent doses of diazepam on prevention of recurrences of febrile seizures. , 1995, The Journal of pediatrics.

[7]  M. Thomasgard,et al.  The Vulnerable Child Syndrome Revisited , 1995, Journal of developmental and behavioral pediatrics : JDBP.

[8]  Geoffrey R. Norman,et al.  Biostatistics: The Bare Essentials , 1993 .

[9]  G. Peckham,et al.  Maternal rating of child health at school age: does the vulnerable child syndrome persist? , 1993, Pediatrics.

[10]  C. Camfield,et al.  Which child will have a febrile seizure? , 1993, American journal of diseases of children.

[11]  W. Hauser,et al.  A prospective study of recurrent febrile seizures. , 1992, The New England journal of medicine.

[12]  Boyce Wt The vulnerable child: new evidence, new approaches. , 1992, Advances in pediatrics.

[13]  W. Boyce The vulnerable child: new evidence, new approaches. , 1992, Advances in Pediatrics.

[14]  T. Balslev Parental Reactions to a Child's First Febrile Convulsion:A Follow‐up Investigation , 1991, Acta paediatrica Scandinavica.

[15]  Y. Hsu PARENTAL REACTIONS TO A CHILD'S FIRST FEBRILE CONVULSION: , 1991 .

[16]  L. Nyström,et al.  An incident case-referent study of febrile convulsions in children: genetical and social aspects. , 1990, Neuropediatrics.

[17]  D. Hirtz,et al.  Generalized tonic-clonic and febrile seizures. , 1989, Pediatric clinics of North America.

[18]  J. Golding,et al.  Febrile convulsions in a national cohort followed up from birth. I--Prevalence and recurrence in the first five years of life. , 1985, British medical journal.

[19]  J. Golding,et al.  Febrile convulsions in a national cohort followed up from birth. II--Medical history and intellectual ability at 5 years of age. , 1985, British medical journal.

[20]  P. Hoare DOES ILLNESS FOSTER DEPENDENCY? A STUDY OF EPILEPTIC AND DIABETIC CHILDREN , 1984, Developmental medicine and child neurology.

[21]  B. Hughes,et al.  Many Parents Think Their Child Is Dying when Having à First Febrile Convulsion , 1981, Developmental medicine and child neurology.

[22]  J. Levy Vulnerable children: parents' perspectives and the use of medical care. , 1980, Pediatrics.

[23]  G. Parker,et al.  Parental overprotection and asthma. , 1979, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[24]  N. Rutter,et al.  Febrile convulsions--what do parents do? , 1978, British medical journal.

[25]  J. Ellenberg,et al.  Prognosis in children with febrile seizures. , 1978, Pediatrics.

[26]  J. Ellenberg,et al.  Febrile seizures and later intellectual performance. , 1978, Archives of neurology.

[27]  J. Ellenberg,et al.  Predictors of epilepsy in children who have experienced febrile seizures. , 1976, The New England journal of medicine.

[28]  A. Solnit,et al.  REACTIONS TO THE THREATENED LOSS OF A CHILD: A VULNERABLE CHILD SYNDROME. PEDIATRIC MANAGEMENT OF THE DYING CHILD, PART III. , 1964, Pediatrics.