RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Anticonvulsant therapy in a general practice population in Northern Ireland JF The Journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners JO J R Coll Gen Pract FD British Journal of General Practice SP 24 OP 31 VO 34 IS 258 A1 John R. McCluggage A1 Hugh C. Ramsey A1 William G. Irwin A1 Marie F. Dowds YR 1984 UL http://bjgp.org/content/34/258/24.abstract AB The clinical management of 242 patients receiving anticonvulsant drugs in a general population of over 75,000 patients in Northern Ireland was reviewed. The prevalence of treated epilepsy was 3.99 per 1,000 population. There were differences in the classification of epilepsy recorded by the general practitioners and an independent epileptologist. In particular, partial epilepsy was under-recorded by the general practitioners. Comparisons between drug dose, type of epilepsy, frequency of fits and antiepileptic drug serum levels were difficult to make. There was, however, evidence of inadequate or inappropriate antiepileptic medication. There were also problems with compliance: 23 per cent of patients had deliberately stopped taking their medication, nearly half of them for over a month at a time.