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-   -   Social support key for MS patients? (https://www.neurotalk.org/multiple-sclerosis/166941-social-support-key-ms-patients.html)

Blessings2You 03-22-2012 05:54 PM

Social support key for MS patients?
 
This quote from our local news (WCAX):

""Doctors fight MS with more than drugs. Researchers at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center say mental health counseling helps, too.

"What we are finding is that elements of social support and environmental modification appear to have a lot more affect on disability and ability to cope with the disease than was previously thought. In the past, we thought the disease severity was one of the only predictors of disability. But we are finding that the social and environmental aspects could be just as important and in some cases more important," said Brant Oliver of DHMC.""

I've read it over a few times (plus listened to what else he said--he's a nurse practitioner, I believe) and agree totally that "social support...(has) a lot more affect on...ability to cope with the disease."

I'm concerned that people listening to that short blurb, only a few seconds long, are going to HEAR that it's mostly in our minds and that mental counseling would solve the problem. I know that's not what he SAID, but I'm already predicting I'll be explaining this.

ANNagain 03-22-2012 06:15 PM

B2Y,

Is there a link for us?
ANN

Blessings2You 03-22-2012 06:22 PM

I'm waiting to see if they post more on their website, or if I can find more somewhere else. That's pretty much all there is, so far.

SallyC 03-22-2012 06:38 PM

So true. Social acceptance and recognition is a very good medicine. Thanks for posting..:hug:

Dejibo 03-23-2012 07:52 AM

I go to Dartmouth Hitchcock and not once have they ever offered me social support programs, nor mental heath programs. Silly MDs. :confused:

Blessings2You 03-23-2012 10:44 AM

I got the impression that it's a study that they did, or are doing. I just wished they'd fleshed it out a bit more. To the casual listener, it SOUNDED as though he was saying that MSrs wouldn't be "as disabled" if they had counseling.

That may be SOMEWHAT true, of course, or true in some cases, but it was so brief that I thought it came across as overly simplistic. And too easy to translate that it's all in our minds.

SallyC 03-23-2012 11:41 AM

I read it differently...that having a social life, acceptance and validation from your family and friends is very healing.

Blessings2You 03-23-2012 11:55 AM

I'm guessing that people with MS will hear it differently from those who don't. OR...I'm making a mountain out of a mole hill. :rolleyes:

EdinNJ 03-23-2012 03:41 PM

Friends - like you have here - Simply Good Medicine!
 
Friends are Simply Good Medicine!

I wrote to the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, where Dr. Oliver works, and Ms. Christensen, the Communications Director there, was truly kind enough to promptly respond and explain how...

"No press release or particular new research involved here:
WCAX, Channel 3's Upper Valley correspondent, Adam Sullivan, was simply looking for an MS expert to talk a bit about the disease, and about progress in treatment and research, as a teaser for a feature story about an MS patient. The media relations people at Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center asked around the MS Center, and Brant Oliver kindly and promptly stepped up to the plate.
Brant did discuss with Sullivan the possibility of doing a story, somewhere down the line, about the support group Brant leads for patients and families of patients.
That's how it all came about; hope that this helps."

There's been a lot of research on the value of and social support networks over the last few decades.

Over 20 years ago, N.Y. Times Health columnist Jane Brody wrote about "Personal Health: Maintaining Friendships for the Sake of Your Health" (J.E. Brody, New York Times, Feb 5, 1992, p. C12). In her column, Brody described how the Duke University research done then examined the value of social support to the life expectancy of cardiac clients. She cited how in her interview, one researcher noted how “Simply put, a support group may be as effective as costly medical treatment."


But I think Dr. Koop said it best when he wrote...

"My years as a medical practitioner, as well as my own first-hand experience, have taught me how important self-help groups are in assisting their members in dealing with problems, stress, hardship and pain... the benefits of mutual aid are experienced by millions of people who turn to others with a similar problem to attempt to deal with their isolation, powerlessness, alienation, and the awful feeling that nobody understands... Health and human service providers are learning that they can indeed provide a superior service when they help their patients and clients find appropriate peer support."
- former U.S. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop, MD

Judy2 03-23-2012 03:47 PM

Well.........how about that?!?:D We all agree that's why we enjoy coming here so much!! :grouphug:


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