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June 3, 2005
From left, class participants Isabel Aguirre, Cherinee Smith and Madeleine Ferry |
Getting
their kicks: Program boosts confidence of kids with epilepsy In the past two years, Clark has run four 10-week programs for MGH patients under the guidance of Elizabeth Thiele, MD, PhD, director of the MassGeneral Hospital for Children's Pediatric Epilepsy Program, and MGH neuropsychologist Amy Morgan, PhD. Clark has taught karate to Thiele's own children for years, and she had seen firsthand the benefits the sport could provide. "Research has shown that karate can have a positive psychological effect on children," Thiele explains. "The structure, the discipline and the opportunity to be in an environment with kids like themselves all serve to boost self-esteem and self-image."
Thiele and Morgan have been collecting outcomes data to quantify the impact of the karate program on anxiety and quality-of-life issues in young epilepsy patients. With the graduation of the most recent class bringing the total number of participants to about 30 Thiele and Morgan now have enough data for a paper they plan to publish later this year. With the growing success and popularity of the program, it is Thiele's
hope to expand the enrollment to a wider pool of candidates. In the meantime,
although the most recent class received their belts in a ceremony May
14, all 10 participants have decided to continue on together to work on
advanced skills. "Derrick Clark and this program have given these
kids an incredible gift the chance to feel not like kids with epilepsy,
but just kids," Thiele says. |
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