Getting Emergency Help

 

When to Call 911 for a Seizure

Dr. Katherine Thaggard explains when someone should call 911 or go to the hospital for a seizure. This video clip is from the webinar Debunking Epilepsy Misconceptions.

Call an ambulance if:  

  • A seizure lasts 5 minutes or longer.
  • One seizure occurs right after another without the person fully regaining consciousness between seizures.
  • Seizures occur closer together than usual for that person.
  • The person’s breathing becomes difficult, or the person appears to be choking.
  • The seizure occurs in water.
  • If an injury occurred.
  • The person asks for medical help.

Remember, you don’t need to call an ambulance for every seizure. Most seizures end on their own within 1-3 minutes.  

When should I call an ambulance?  

An ambulance is needed if:  

  • A person has a life-threatening seizure  
  • A person has breathing or heart problems during or after a seizure  
  • There is serious injury 

Learn what to do during a seizure by watching this video and taking a seizure first aid course.

Authored By:

Patricia Penovich, MD
Tracy Glauser, MD

on Tuesday, August 13, 2024

Reviewed By:

Epilepsy Foundation Communications

on Tuesday, November 05, 2024

Resources

Epilepsy Centers

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Epilepsy Medication

Find in-depth information on anti-seizure medications so you know what to ask your doctor.

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Epilepsy and Seizures Helpline

Call our Epilepsy and Seizures Helpline and talk with an epilepsy information specialist or submit a question online.

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Tools & Resources

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