Childhood epilepsy in India: How early care is changing young lives
For many families, a child’s first seizure feels like the ground has slipped away. One moment, everything is normal. The next, there is shaking, staring, silence, or panic. In India, where epilepsy still carries stigma, that moment brings fear layered with confusion.Dr Praveen Gupta, Director Neurosciences at Marengo Asia Hospitals, has seen this up close. “The biggest hurdle isn’t treatment,” he tells families. “It’s spotting it early. That delay can harm a child’s cognitive, thinking skills, school progress, and joy.”India has more than 10 million people living with epilepsy. Nearly one-third are children. Many more cases likely go unreported because families stay silent. But silence does not protect a child. Early action does.
What childhood epilepsy really is
Childhood epilepsy is not one single illness. It is a group of brain disorders where sudden bursts of abnormal electrical activity trigger repeated seizures.Dr Vivek Barun, Senior Consultant in Neurology and Epilepsy at Artemis Hospitals, explains clearly, “Childhood epilepsy is a brain disorder that makes a child have seizures over and over again because of sudden bursts of abnormal electrical activity in the brain. It can start at any age and each child may show it in a different way. Some seizures make people shake and lose consciousness while others may look like short episodes of staring or strange movements.”That difference matters.Some children have dramatic convulsions. Others have brief “staring spells” that teachers mistake for daydreaming. Some episodes last seconds. Others need emergency care.Dr Gupta reminds parents that epilepsy can hide in plain sight. Quick blank spells, subtle jerks, repeated odd behaviour, these are not always “tantrums” or “nerves.” They may be what he calls “brain electrical storms.”
The cost of waiting
Many families wait months before seeking help. They hope it was a one-time event. They fear labels. They listen to myths.Dr Gupta has watched this pattern for over two decades. “Fear can turn to hope with the right steps,” he says. But those steps must come early.Untreated or poorly controlled seizures can affect memory, attention, and learning. A child may struggle in school without anyone connecting the dots. Emotional health can also suffer. The fear of the next seizure often becomes as heavy as the seizure itself.Dr Barun stresses the urgency, “A timely diagnosis can change everything for you. If a person has epilepsy doctors can figure out what kind it is and start the right treatment by doing a full medical exam that includes a detailed history, an EEG, and brain imaging if needed.”

Diagnosis: More than just a label
Epilepsy is not diagnosed by guesswork. It requires careful evaluation.Doctors may recommend:
- A detailed medical history
- EEG to study brain waves
- MRI to look at brain structure
- Genetic testing in select cases
Dr Gupta emphasises that epilepsy must be separated from psychological disorders. Staring spells or unusual behaviours can look like anxiety or ADHD. “Misdiagnosing as ‘just nerves’ delays real treatment, worsening seizures or development,” he warns.In the past decade, epilepsy care has advanced sharply. Twenty-four-hour EEG monitoring and specialised epilepsy clinics now help doctors classify seizure types accurately. And that classification shapes treatment.The good news? According to Dr Gupta, about 70 percent of children achieve good seizure control with early anti-epileptic medicines. Some need treatment for a few years. Others may need it longer.But control is possible.
Treatment is not just about pills
Medicine reduces seizures. But epilepsy touches more than the brain’s electrical signals.Dr Mukesh Batra, Founder-Chairman Emeritus of Dr Batra’s Healthcare, highlights the broader picture, “Childhood epilepsy can be deeply unsettling for families, especially when symptoms appear without warning. Early recognition and prompt care can make a meaningful difference. When seizures are noticed and treated in time, children are better able to continue their normal development, remain confident, and take part in everyday activities. This is why awareness among parents, teachers, and caregivers is just as important as the treatment itself.”Care, he adds, must go deeper.“Care should extend beyond controlling seizures alone. Factors such as emotional wellbeing, sleep quality, stress, and daily routines strongly influence long-term stability. A thoughtful, individualised approach that considers the child as a whole, not just the diagnosis, can meaningfully support conventional treatment.”In practice, this means combining neurology with psychology, physiotherapy, dietary advice, and family counselling. In complex cases, surgery or devices such as VNS may be explored. Some children may benefit from dietary therapy.Dr Barun also underlines this view, “Early intervention not only lowers the number of seizures but it also protects a child’s emotional, behavioral and academic growth. Family education and emotional support are just as important.”
Parents: The first line of protection
Parents feel helpless after a diagnosis. Yet they become the strongest link in their child’s care.Doctors teach families to:
- Recognise triggers such as missed sleep or stress
- Follow medicine schedules strictly
- Keep a seizure diary
- Learn first-aid basics: place the child on the side, time the seizure, do not restrain
Understanding replaces fear. When families learn that epilepsy is a brain event and not a curse, myths begin to fade.Dr Batra reflects this reassurance, “With consistent guidance, family involvement, and compassionate support, children living with epilepsy can grow into active and confident individuals. Early intervention, continuity of care, and empathy remain central to helping every child move forward with resilience and hope.”Schools also need awareness. A child with epilepsy does not need isolation. They need understanding and a clear action plan.Early intervention is not optional. It is the bridge from crisis to strength.Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not replace medical advice. If a child experiences a seizure or unusual symptoms, consult a qualified healthcare professional immediately for proper evaluation and treatment.
