Article info
Editorial
“This house believes that only general practitioners with a specialist interest in epilepsy should be treating the condition”
Citation
“This house believes that only general practitioners with a specialist interest in epilepsy should be treating the condition”
Publication history
- First published May 23, 2008.
Online issue publication
April 14, 2016
Request permissions
If you wish to reuse any or all of this article please use the link below which will take you to the Copyright Clearance Center’s RightsLink service. You will be able to get a quick price and instant permission to reuse the content in many different ways.
Copyright information
2008 BMJ Publishing Group
Other content recommended for you
- Age, sex and ethnic differentials in the prevalence and control of epilepsy among Sri Lankan children: a population-based study
- Focal cortical dysplasia: long term seizure outcome after surgical treatment
- Acceptability of a task sharing and shifting model between family physicians and physiotherapists in French multidisciplinary primary healthcare centres: a cross-sectional survey
- Best supportive care in advanced lung cancer—more than a label?
- Auras and the risk of seizures with impaired consciousness following epilepsy surgery: implications for driving
- EEG-fMRI in the presurgical evaluation of temporal lobe epilepsy
- Collaborative model of intrapartum care: qualitative study on barriers and facilitators to implementation in a private Brazilian hospital
- Improving epilepsy control among children with cerebral palsy in rural Bangladesh: a prospective cohort-based study
- Long-term outcome of surgical disconnection of the epileptic zone as an alternative to resection for nonlesional mesial temporal epilepsy
- Protocol for determining primary healthcare practice characteristics, models of practice and patient accessibility using an exploratory census survey with linkage to administrative data in Nova Scotia, Canada