Childhood Epilepsy
Identifying and supporting children under 7 with childhood epilepsy in a district programme
For children under 7, a district early intervention programme should treat childhood epilepsy as a medical condition needing prompt referral — not therapy first. Frontline workers identify suspected seizures and route rapidly to a paediatrician or neurologist; developmental and family support is added once seizures are medically controlled.
When a district reaches every village, a seizure spotted early becomes a child who learns, plays and thrives on time.
In short
Childhood epilepsy (ICD-11 8A6Z) is first and foremost a medical condition, so a district early intervention programme should treat it as prompt medical referral, not therapy-first. The programme's job is to identify children under 7 with suspected seizures through frontline screening, route them rapidly to a paediatrician or neurologist for diagnosis and anti-seizure treatment, and then wrap developmental and family support around the medical care once seizures are being managed. Early, accurate medical control protects the developing brain — and that is what makes later learning and therapy possible.Identifying children early at district scale
Frontline workers — ASHAs, Anganwadi workers and ANMs — can be trained to recognise and escalate, not to diagnose:- Witnessed events — staring spells with unresponsiveness, sudden stiffening or jerking, repeated brief "absences", drop attacks, or unusual repetitive movements.
- Infantile spasms in babies under 1 — sudden clusters of head-nodding or body-folding, often on waking. This is a medical emergency — refer the same day.
- Any loss or stalling of skills (speech, sitting, social smiling) alongside unusual events.
- Parent or caregiver report of "fits", fever-fits that keep recurring, or odd episodes — always taken seriously.
Build these into the existing RBSK / Anganwadi developmental-check rhythm so screening is routine, not exceptional, and ensure a clear, fast referral line to the District Early Intervention Centre and paediatric neurology.
Supporting the child and family once diagnosed
Diagnosis and anti-seizure medication sit with the medical team. Around that, the district programme adds the developmental layer:- Adherence and safety support — helping families keep medication schedules, recognise emergencies and use a simple seizure diary.
- Developmental monitoring — many children with epilepsy develop typically; some need speech, motor or learning support, which is added after medical stabilisation.
- School and Anganwadi inclusion — staff trained in first-aid for seizures and in keeping the child fully included.
- Family counselling — reducing stigma, explaining that epilepsy is treatable, and connecting families to entitlements.
The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from a screening checklist or an app, and for epilepsy always alongside the child's treating doctor. With 70+ centres across 4 states, 700+ therapists and 4.95 lakh+ families served, Pinnacle can partner a district programme on training, structured developmental review and post-stabilisation therapy. Explore Childhood Epilepsy, our developmental therapy services, and what the AbilityScore is and how it is calculated.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 (8A6Z, epilepsy); WHO guidance on epilepsy as a treatable neurological condition; CDC and AAP guidance on recognising seizures and developmental monitoring in young children; Rehabilitation Council of India frameworks for early intervention.Next step — District teams can partner with Pinnacle to train frontline workers and build a fast referral-to-support pathway for children with epilepsy.
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Staring or unresponsive spells, sudden stiffening or jerking, repeated brief absences, drop attacks, or — in babies under 1 — clusters of head-nodding or body-folding (infantile spasms, a same-day emergency). Any of these, or recurrent fever-fits, warrant prompt medical referral.
Try this at home
Train frontline workers to keep a simple plain-language event note — what was seen, how long it lasted, the child's age — and to refer to a doctor first. A short, accurate description speeds diagnosis far more than a label.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
Is childhood epilepsy treated with therapy first?
No. Epilepsy is a medical condition, so the priority is prompt referral to a paediatrician or neurologist for diagnosis and anti-seizure medication. Developmental and family support is added around the medical care, usually once seizures are being managed.
What can frontline workers safely do?
They can recognise and escalate — not diagnose. Workers spot witnessed seizure-like events, infantile spasms, recurrent fever-fits or stalling skills, take parent reports seriously, and route the child quickly to medical care and the District Early Intervention Centre.
What is a same-day emergency in a baby?
Infantile spasms — sudden clusters of head-nodding or body-folding in a child under 1, often on waking — should be referred to a doctor the same day, as early treatment protects development.
Do children with epilepsy need developmental support?
Many develop typically; some need speech, motor or learning support. This is assessed after medical stabilisation through structured developmental review, alongside school and Anganwadi inclusion and family counselling.