First aid for seizures
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This information is aimed at prisoners with epilepsy. Further information on first aid is on our website.
First aid for seizures (fits) with full loss of consciousness
This is what you should do
- Call for help
- Protect the person from injury
- Remove harmful objects from nearby
- Cushion their head with something like a pillow, or your hands
- Turn them on their side once the seizure has finished
- Stay with them until they have fully recovered
And this is what you should not do
- Don’t try to stop the seizure or hold the person down
- Don’t put anything in their mouth
- Don’t try to move them unless they are in danger
- Don’t give them anything to eat or drink until they are fully recovered
- Don’t try to bring them round
First aid for seizures (fits) without full loss of consciousness
This is what you should do
- Stay calm
- Guide the person from danger
- Remember that they might not know what’s going on
- Stay with them until they have fully recovered
And this is what you should not do
- Don’t try to stop the seizure or hold the person down
- Don’t act in a way that could frighten them
- Don’t give them anything to eat or drink until they are fully recovered
- Don’t try to bring them round
When you should call for emergency medical care
- If one seizure follows another without the person gaining awareness between seizures
- If the person is injured during the seizure
- Information checked and approved for accuracy by the Primary and Social Care review board, Department of Health.
We can provide references and information on the source material we use to write our epilepsy advice and information pages. Please contact our Epilepsy Helpline by email at helpline@epilepsy.org.uk.
Epilepsy advice and information A to Z
- What is epilepsy?
- Children
- Depression
- Disability Discrimination Act (UK)
- Driving
- Education
- Employment
- Entitlements for people with epilepsy in England
- Entitlements for people with epilepsy in Wales
- Epilepsy and caring for children: a comprehensive guide
- Epilepsy and learning disabilities
- Epilepsy in later life
- Epilepsy information for prisons
- Getting a diagnosis
- Identity jewellery
- Inheritance
- Living with dificult to control epilepsy
- Me and my dad
- Memory
- Men and Epilepsy
- Mobile phones and epilepsy
- Osteoporosis, osteomalacia and epilepsy
- Photosensitive epilepsy
- Safety
- Seizures
- Sports and leisure
- Stress and epilepsy
- Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP)
- Swine flu and epilepsy
- Syndromes
- Travel abroad
- Treatment
- Women and epilepsy
- Young people and epilepsy
- Epilepsy Action and the Information Standard
- The Epilepsies: You, Epilepsy and the NICE Guideline
- Epilepsy Action Information Reviewers (EAIRs)
- Technical editing/writing and copyright
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Epilepsy Helpline
- UK freephone 0808 800 5050
- International +44 113 210 8850
- Email: helpline@epilepsy.org.uk
- Txt msg: 07797 805 390 info






