Opinion: It's time to bring epilepsy awareness out of the dark ages

You might think these negative views are a relic of our distant past, but you’d be wrong.The misunderstandings about epilepsy continued into modernity. In Alberta, epileptics were routinely sterilized under the Sexual Sterilization Act until 1972, as part of a eugenics program designed to prevent those considered mentally defective from reproducing.More recent examples show how a lack of understanding about epilepsy can have serious consequences.A little over three years ago, Michael MacIsaac was shot and killed by Durham police in Ontario. The police were cleared of any wrongdoing in the incident, but his family believes the 47-year-old was in the middle of an epileptic seizure when he was shot. In 2016, Edmonton police came under criticism in two separate cases for how they dealt with individuals arrested while experiencing epileptic seizures.An Ontario off-duty police officer was tasered and put in handcuffs while in the midst of a seizure in 2008. That prompted him to compile a video, accredited by the Canadian Epilepsy Alliance and published on the Canadian Police Knowledge Network website, that outlines how police officers should react in an emergency situation involving an epileptic seizure.Nevertheless in 2016, Errol Greene died while in the Winnipeg Remand Centre following epileptic seizures. His family is now suing the province and a provincial inquest into his death has been called by the acting medical examiner.Certainly, for those who’ve watched someone experiencing a generalized seizure, it can be a frightening event. But learning what to do and how to react is necessary to remove the mystery and tear down the barriers.In this day of public awareness campaigns on the importance of vaccinations, hand washing and respectful treatment of those who are developmentally delayed, it is clear that now is a good time to bring epilepsy out of the shadows.Given the number of people who are affected by epilepsy on a daily basis, public health agencies across the country should also make awareness and education a priority. This is 2017. We know that people who have epilepsy are not demonically possessed, but the disease remains a mystery for far too many people — with potentially tragic consequences. It’s time to bring epilepsy out of the dark ages.