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  EMSP Web Alert
NEWS · EMSP MEMBER NEWS printversion Send article
Europe marks World Multiple Sclerosis Day on 26 May 2010
By Peer Baneke, chief executive of the Multiple sclerosis international federation (MSIF) and Dorothea Pitschnau-Michel, president of the European Multiple Sclerosis Platform (EMSP)

Europe marks World Multiple Sclerosis Day on 26 May 2010The EMSP and MSIF - umbrella organisations for the MS movement in Europe and beyond - support initiatives around the world for World MS Day on 26 May. This year, the theme is employment. New research commissioned by the MSIF shows that loss of employment is the main factor in the global economic impact of MS. Many people with MS face discrimination at work or lose their jobs owing to a lack of understanding of the disease. Yet an MSIF survey on MS and employment showed that simple changes, such as flexitime or seated work, can help people stay in the workforce for longer.

In Europe, 80 in every 100,000 people have MS and the average age of onset is 29. Many are still at the start of their career when diagnosed and find that MS severely impacts on their ability to work at this crucial time in their lives. Women, who are three times more likely than men to develop MS, are often hit especially hard. Finding time to balance MS, employment, and motherhood is challenging.

Additional data on these issues were generated last year through the “Multiple sclerosis information dividend” pilot project on a planned European MS Register. This project, which ended recently, was co-funded by the European Commission’s public health programme.

World MS Day will see employment-related campaigning activities in countries across Europe and beyond. People living with MS are keen to raise awareness of the disease to stimulate funding for research and treatment. Many organisations are hoping to grab the attention of policy makers who can ensure that their rights to equality and non-discrimination are upheld in line with the UN Convention on the rights of persons with disabilities.

Read more at: http://ec.europa.eu/health-eu/newsletter/50/newsletter_en.htm

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