Epilepsy is a chronic neurological disorder with many negative sequelae related to the school attendance of affected children. School environment plays a fundamental role in the stigmatization accompanying this disease.
Individual risk factors related to children with epilepsy themselves, their parents, teachers and classmates have not been sufficiently studied yet; the complex structure of the school life of children with epilepsy determined by the mutual coupling of the particular variables thus remains unclear. The first objective of this review article is to provide an overview of the most important findings related to this topic.
The second objective is to introduce a complex study in which outcome will be a detailed structural model taking into consideration the most important variables related to the life of children with epilepsy in a school and quantifying the links between them. Such a complex model should serve as a theoretical background for planing tailored interventions to improve the quality of life of these children by means of reducing the stigma related not only to the disease itself but also to report the parents' teachers' and classmaes' knowledge.
Recommendations for further research as well as clinical practice in this field are given at the end of the study.