Therapy Plan for Epilepsy
Epilepsy is a neurological condition characterized by recurrent seizures, and its impact extends far beyond the seizures themselves — affecting learning, memory, social confidence, and emotional wellbeing. While medication manages seizures for most people, therapy plays a vital role in addressing the cognitive, psychological, and social effects. Cognitive-behavioral therapy helps manage anxiety and seizure-related fears, while educational and family supports ensure children keep pace academically and socially. With proper support, most people with epilepsy lead full, active lives.
Important Note
All therapists working with a person with epilepsy must be trained in seizure first aid and have a current seizure action plan on file. They should know the individual's seizure type, typical duration, medication, and when to call 911. Therapy environments should be assessed for safety — padded surfaces for floor work, avoidance of strobe or flickering lights (for photosensitive epilepsy), and a clear protocol for what to do during a seizure. Therapists should never restrain someone during a seizure or put anything in their mouth.
Recommended Therapies at a Glance
| Therapy | Priority | Best Ages | Frequency | Funded? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CBT | Essential | 6+ years | 1 session/week | Yes |
| Occupational Therapy | Recommended | All ages | 1-2 sessions/week | Yes |
| Special Education | Recommended | 5-18 years | Daily (school-based) | Yes |
| Family Therapy | Recommended | All ages | Biweekly to monthly | Yes |
| Yoga & Mindfulness | Beneficial | 8+ years | 2-3 sessions/week | Varies |
| Peer Mentoring | Beneficial | 10+ years | Biweekly to monthly | Varies |
| Social Recreation | Beneficial | 5+ years | 1-2 sessions/week | Varies |
Newly Diagnosed Child (2-6 years)
A seizure diagnosis is frightening, but knowledge is your greatest tool. Understanding your child's epilepsy and building a safety plan gives your whole family confidence and peace of mind.
Essential Therapies
Introduce at This Stage
Sample Weekly Schedule
| Day | Activity | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Monday | Occupational therapy (developmental support) | 45 min |
| Wednesday | Family therapy (adjustment and education) | 50 min |
| As needed | Neurology follow-up | 30-60 min |
Create a seizure action plan and share it with everyone who cares for your child — daycare, grandparents, babysitters. Learn seizure first aid and teach others. Monitor medication side effects closely, as they can affect behaviour and development. Consider neuropsychological testing to establish a cognitive baseline.
School Age (6-12 years)
School should be a safe, supportive place for your child. A strong seizure action plan at school and the right educational supports make all the difference in their confidence and achievement.
Essential Therapies
Introduce at This Stage
Sample Weekly Schedule
| Day | Activity | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Monday | CBT (anxiety management, seizure coping) | 50 min |
| Wednesday | Occupational therapy or special education support | 45 min |
| Thursday | Social recreation (inclusive activity) | 60 min |
| Monthly | Family therapy | 50 min |
Ensure the school has a detailed seizure action plan, staff are trained in seizure first aid, and your child's IEP addresses any learning impacts from seizures or medication. Memory and attention difficulties are common — work with the school psychologist on accommodations. Help your child explain epilepsy to friends in age-appropriate ways to reduce stigma and build social confidence.
Teen Years (13-17)
Teenagers with epilepsy face unique challenges around independence, driving, and social identity. Empowering your teen to manage their own condition builds resilience and prepares them for adulthood.
Essential Therapies
Introduce at This Stage
Sample Weekly Schedule
| Day | Activity | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Tuesday | CBT (independence, self-management) | 50 min |
| Thursday | Yoga/mindfulness (stress and seizure management) | 60 min |
| Biweekly | Peer mentoring (epilepsy peer group) | 60 min |
Discuss medication adherence honestly — teens often skip doses due to side effects or social pressure. Address driving restrictions with empathy and help explore alternatives. Sleep deprivation and alcohol are common seizure triggers during teen years, so open communication is essential. Begin transition planning to adult neurology services. Help your teen learn to advocate for accommodations independently.
Adult (18+)
As an adult with epilepsy, you are the expert on your own condition. Building a supportive network and managing triggers proactively helps you pursue your goals with confidence.
Essential Therapies
Sample Weekly Schedule
| Day | Activity | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Weekly | CBT or counselling (as needed) | 50 min |
| 2-3x/week | Yoga/mindfulness or exercise | 45-60 min |
| Monthly | Peer support group | 60-90 min |
Know your workplace rights under Canadian human rights legislation — you are not required to disclose epilepsy unless it affects safety-sensitive duties. Explore provincial driving regulations and understand the seizure-free period required. Stress management through CBT, mindfulness, and regular exercise can reduce seizure frequency for many people. Connect with Epilepsy Canada and your provincial epilepsy association for ongoing resources.
Build Your Therapy Team
Neurologist / Epileptologist
Manages seizure medications, orders EEGs and MRIs, and considers surgical options for drug-resistant epilepsy. An epileptologist is a neurologist with specialized training in epilepsy.
Neuropsychologist
Assesses cognitive function including memory, attention, and processing speed — areas commonly affected by seizures and anti-seizure medications. Guides educational and vocational accommodations.
Psychologist / CBT Therapist
Addresses seizure-related anxiety, depression, and coping strategies. CBT has strong evidence for improving quality of life in epilepsy.
Occupational Therapist
Helps with safety planning, daily living adaptations, and cognitive strategies for memory and organization challenges that often accompany epilepsy.
School Psychologist / Special Educator
Develops IEP accommodations, monitors academic progress, and trains school staff on seizure protocols. Essential for children whose learning is affected by seizures or medication.
Coordination Tips
- Keep a detailed seizure diary (timing, type, duration, triggers) and share it with your entire team — neurologist, therapist, and school. Patterns in the data guide better treatment decisions.
- Ensure every environment your child enters has a current seizure action plan — school, therapy offices, recreational programs, and camps all need clear protocols.
- Coordinate with the school psychologist to distinguish between learning difficulties caused by seizures versus medication side effects — the interventions are different for each.
- Schedule therapy sessions at times when your child is most alert and medication side effects are lowest. Share your observations about energy patterns with your therapy team.
- Connect with Epilepsy Canada or your provincial epilepsy association for up-to-date resources, camp programs, and peer support networks.
Annual Cost Estimate
These are theoretical maximums if paying fully out-of-pocket for private therapy. In practice, most families combine public services, provincial funding, insurance, and tax credits — and focus on the 2-3 therapies with the most evidence for their situation.
Essential Only
$3,000 - $8,000
1-2 core therapies (private rates)
Full Program
$10,000 - $18,000
All therapies at private rates — rarely needed
Realistic Out-of-Pocket
$2,000 - $6,000
With public services, provincial funding + tax credits
How to Reduce Therapy Costs
- Most families focus on 2-3 core therapies, not all of them. Prioritize based on what has the biggest impact right now.
- Many therapies are available free through the public system — schools, children's treatment centres, and community health centres provide speech, OT, and physio at no cost (though waitlists can be long).
- Provincial autism/disability programs often cover the most expensive therapies — apply immediately after diagnosis, as waitlists can be 1-2 years.
- University and college clinics offer supervised therapy sessions at 40-60% below private rates.
- Group therapy sessions are typically 30-50% cheaper than individual sessions and provide additional social benefits.
- All therapy costs can be claimed on the Medical Expense Tax Credit (METC, line 33099) — this includes travel costs over 40km to appointments.
- The Disability Tax Credit (DTC) unlocks the Child Disability Benefit ($3,411/year) which can directly offset therapy costs.
- Employer benefits plans may cover therapy — many now include speech, OT, and psychology with $500-2,000/year limits.
Questions to Ask a New Therapist
- 1What are the qualifications and experience with this specific condition?
- 2What does a typical session look like, and how do participants and families get involved?
- 3How is progress measured, and how often are updates shared?
- 4How long before meaningful improvement is typically expected?
- 5Is there coordination with other therapists and the school team?
- 6What can be done at home to reinforce what is worked on in sessions?
- 7What is the cancellation policy, and are makeup sessions offered?
- 8Is direct billing available through insurance providers?
Related Resources
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