The choice of medication for the treatment of epilepsy will be individualized by combining the patient’s seizure type, age, and other comprehensive factors. For example, in children with generalized seizures or aphasic seizures, if the patient is male, he may choose sodium valproate, which costs about several tens of dollars a month. If the patient’s condition is more complex and requires a combination of drugs, it could be $100, $200, or thousands of dollars. Overall, depending on the disease and also the individualization of the patient, it will determine which drug to choose and thus its cost. It will also be based on the patient’s financial situation, but financial is not the main thing. Among inpatients, basically all medications for epilepsy are covered by health insurance, but because epilepsy is a long-term chronic disease with recurrent seizures, it requires long-term medication, usually taking 2-5 years, and some patients pick up their medication on an outpatient basis. Some medical insurance treats epilepsy as a special chronic disease and is reimbursed for medications picked up in the outpatient setting, but there are many patients who are not covered by medical insurance.