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‘Living Well with MS’ podcast

Geoff Allix explores different aspects of the Overcoming MS Program - giving you ideas, tips and inspiration to live well with MS.

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Informative episodes – When you’re initially diagnosed with MS, you can feel like your world has been turned upside down. Listening to experts in the field or others in a similar situation, who have a positive outlook can help you to refocus, regain your confidence, and learn to adapt. 

To help you do this, use our podcast library, including interviews with guests such as Professor George Jelinek.

Featuring inspiring guests – There is also an important personal, social feel to our podcasts — we want you to be part of the Overcoming MS community. Listening to like-minded people and their positive experiences, as well as their own difficulties, is good for your wellbeing and will keep you moving forward on your MS journey.

Listen as you travel, do chores or exercise.

Subscribe on your favourite platform – Google, Apple podcasts, Spotify

The Living Well with MS podcast is made possible by the generous donors, including The Hospital Saturday Fund.

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Our latest podcast:

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These resources are designed to give you a quick overview of the Overcoming MS Program, and allow you to get started on your journey to wellness in just a few minutes. These are helpful if:

  • You are keen to understand the Overcoming MS Program
  • You are ready to get started with the Overcoming MS Program
  • You are a family member, friend, colleague or supporter of someone with MS and need a quick understanding of the program
  • You haven’t read the Overcoming MS book (learn more about the latest book here

To download any of our free resources, simply click the ‘Download’ button below on the item you’d like. All resources are in PDF format.

*Note: all Overcoming MS resources are for personal use only, and should not be distributed without the consent of Overcoming Multiple Sclerosis. For more information, please contact us.

Overcoming MS Program overview

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Diet and vitamin D

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Physical activity

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Stress managment

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Medication

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Family health

Change your life for life

What are the effects of MS?

This can cause life-changing symptoms, including extreme fatigue, numbness, tingling, pain, tremors, slurred speech, loss of balance and muscle coordination, visual disturbance and muscle weakness.

MS is three times more common in women than men and the diagnosis usually comes in the prime of someone’s life, typically between the ages of 20 and 40.
MS can be a potentially devastating condition with a potentially profound effect on the quality of life. We’re getting closer to understanding what causes it – most likely a combination of lifestyle and environmental factors as well as genetics.

While there is currently no cure, there is hope for a brighter, healthier future.

Symptoms of MS

When searching for the causes of various symptoms online, many sources will refer to MS in the list of possible diagnoses. The symptoms often attributed to MS can also be caused by many other conditions, so it is important that a specialist makes a diagnosis of MS.

If you have recently been diagnosed with MS, one of the first symptoms you may have experienced is a problem with your vision. You may have previously noticed other symptoms like dizziness or fatigue, but these are often dismissed.

People with multiple sclerosis can experience a wide range of symptoms, and have different symptoms at different times — you may not experience any of the symptoms that others do, and no two people with MS will have exactly the same experience.

Typical symptoms can include:

  • Fatigue
  • Depression
  • MS spasticity
  • Vision problems
  • Walking (gait) difficulties
  • Tingling and numbness
  • Cognitive symptoms
  • Bladder spasms and MS
  • MS vertigo
  • Bowel problems
  • Sexual problems

It can feel overwhelming to see a long list of possible symptoms, but there are so many ways in which you can manage your symptoms and their progression with the Overcoming MS Program.

Causes of MS

With people who have an underlying genetic predisposition towards MS, it can then be triggered by things such as smoking, a lack of vitamin D, viral infection, stress, etc.

Some of the factors that have been suggested as possible environmental triggers of MS include:

  • Lack of sunlight and vitamin D – the risk of MS increases directly as you move further north or south of the Equator. As soon as you are diagnosed with MS make sure your vitamin D levels are tested.
  • Smoking – people who smoke are twice as likely to develop MS compared with those who don’t smoke, and their MS tends to progress more quickly.
  • Viral infections – such as the Epstein-Barr virus (responsible for glandular fever)
  • Females are at higher risk – women are up to three times more likely to develop MS than men
  • Close family members and children of people living with MS are at an increased risk of developing MS themselves, but luckily there are steps that can be taken to reduce your overall risk.
  • Stop smoking
  • Exercise regularly
  • Make sure you get enough sun exposure and supplement with vitamin D (5,000 IU per day in winter)
  • Keep your stress levels down
  • Eat a healthy diet low in saturated fat, and supplement with flaxseed oil

Treatment of MS

MS varies from person to person — from its different symptoms to how quickly it progresses, so the combination of MS treatments will vary depending on your needs.

Treatment for MS may include:

  • MS medication — disease modifying drugs
  • Medication to manage symptoms
  • Physiotherapy
  • Occupational therapy can help you make adaptations to make everyday tasks easier
  • Self-management techniques such as learning to pace yourself
  • Aids, assistive devices and equipment
  • A speech therapist to help you if you have trouble with speech
  • Stress management techniques
  • Talking therapies for depression
  • Diet
  • Exercise
  • Vitamin D — which dampens overactive immune responses and also protects brain cells

Take a look at our individual symptoms pages to read about what specific treatments can help with certain symptoms. The Overcoming MS Program combines all these treatments for the most comprehensive approach, improving your overall physical and mental wellbeing.

There can be a lot of benefits to finding an MS community of like-minded people if you are lacking in motivation or feeling isolated.

References

https://www.bmj.com/content/349/bmj.g4737
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4349402/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3375103/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4168242/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4407118/

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