Litcius/Paper detail

Lifestyle Advice for Pediatric Migraine: Blaming the Patient, or Evidence Based?

Amy A. Gelfand, Samantha Irwin

2020Seminars in Neurology20 citationsDOI

Abstract

Children and teenagers with migraine are often advised to live a life of perfect balance-to sleep regularly and well, to eat breakfast each day, to drink plenty of water, and to exercise religiously. The logic is that doing so will decrease their migraine frequency. The corollary that follows is that failing to follow such advice will result in the patient continuing to experience migraine at its current frequency. This opens the door to potentially blaming the patients for their migraine and contributing to migraine stigma. This article reviews the current state of the evidence for each of these behavioral interventions for migraine prevention, and provides the clinician with practical advice for counseling patients.

Topics & Concepts

MigraineMedicinePsychological interventionCorollaryMedical adviceStigma (botany)PsychiatryPure mathematicsMathematicsMigraine and Headache StudiesNeuroscience of respiration and sleepPsychosomatic Disorders and Their Treatments