🚨NEW-MS — Early-Recognition Code
If you (or a loved one, especially a woman age 20–40) develop any one of these new, otherwise-unexplained neurological symptoms, ask for a neurology referral. Optic neuritis in particular is a medical urgency.
🎯Three Phases · One Force Field
Every square belongs to one of three phases of mastery. Inside each square's detail panel, the four sections — Concepts · Skills · Actions · Plan — are the building blocks of these phases.
📘 Learn It Tier 1 · Aware
Identity earned: Self-Advocate. The "know" — head knowledge, MS subtypes, your relapse history, MRI burden, EDSS, vitamin D, modifiable risks.
🛠 Live It Tier 2 · Active
Identity earned: Care-Team Member. The "do" — daily skills (heat management, exercise, sleep, DMT adherence) and this-week actions that turn skills into habits.
📣 Share It Tier 3 · Certified
Identity earned: Ambassador. The "carry forward" — talk to kids, partner, employer; mentor a newly-diagnosed person; advocate for early high-efficacy treatment.
🛡️Your Force Field — 16 Squares
Click any square to open its detail panel. Each square is a tile in your shield. Keep clicking, learning, and acting — your Force Field gets stronger every step.
What Is MS?
An autoimmune disease where the immune system attacks myelin — the insulation around nerve fibers — in the brain, spinal cord, and optic nerves. Most common type: relapsing-remitting (RRMS). Not muscular dystrophy, not ALS, not the death sentence the 1970s framing suggests.
Primer360 Human Anatomy
Central Nervous System
Brain → spinal cord → optic nerves. Myelin is the insulation; lesions are the demyelinated patches. Where the lesion sits decides which symptom you get — optic nerve = vision loss, spinal cord = numbness/weakness, cerebellum = balance.
AnatomyWho Gets It?
~1 million Americans, ~2.9 million worldwide. Women 2–3× more often than men. Most diagnosed age 20–40. Higher-latitude populations carry higher risk; vitamin D, EBV exposure, smoking, and obesity in adolescence all matter.
PrimerThe Numbers
~85% start as RRMS. Most untreated transition to secondary progressive over decades. With modern high-efficacy DMTs started early, most people with MS today have minimal disability. Lifetime cost without DMT vs. with: dramatically different on every axis.
PrimerRecognize a Relapse
New neurological symptom (vision loss, numbness, weakness, severe imbalance) lasting >24 hours, not explained by fever or exertion. Pseudo-relapse: old symptom worse with heat, infection, fatigue — settles when trigger goes. Real relapse → call MS team within 24–48 hours.
Learn ItOptic Neuritis Is Urgent
Painful vision loss in one eye, often with painful eye movement and color desaturation. Same-day or next-day neuro-ophthalmology / neurology evaluation — MRI brain + spine, possibly IV steroids. Can be the first MS attack; sometimes precedes diagnosis by years.
Learn ItKnow My Numbers & Risks
Relapse history (count + locations) · MRI lesion burden (T2, gadolinium-enhancing) · EDSS in plain language · vitamin D level (target 40–60 ng/mL) · BMI · smoking status · vaccination status before starting DMT. Each lever is real.
Learn ItLifestyle Force Field
Heat management (cooling vest, AC, cool showers) · exercise IS recommended (long-debunked myth) · 7–9 hr sleep · stop smoking (smoking accelerates progression) · Mediterranean eating · vitamin D · mental health · social connection. Lifestyle changes the long-arc trajectory.
Learn ItModern High-Efficacy DMTs
Three tiers: high-efficacy (ocrelizumab, ofatumumab, natalizumab, alemtuzumab, cladribine) · oral S1P (fingolimod, ozanimod, siponimod, ponesimod) · platform (interferons, glatiramer, fumarates, teriflunomide). Recent evidence: start high-efficacy early.
Live ItCare Team Members
MS-specialist neurologist · primary care · MS nurse navigator · PT · OT · urology · psychiatry / behavioral health · ophthalmology · pharmacist · social work · National MS Society peer mentor. Everyone in the long arc.
Live ItTelemedicine & Tech
MS Society MyMSManager · symptom-tracking apps (PROMS, Floodlight Open) · cooling vest tech · home BP if vascular comorbid · smartwatch for activity / fall detection · MyChart and DMT-specific patient portals · telehealth follow-up between MRI visits.
TechInsurance, DMT Cost & Help
DMTs are expensive ($60K–$100K+/yr list). Manufacturer copay programs, foundations (NMSS, HealthWell, PAN), Medicare Part B vs. Part D rules, FMLA, ADA workplace accommodations, SSDI long-term. Care navigators help.
Live ItEquity, Identity & the Long Arc
Black and Hispanic Americans with MS are diagnosed later, treated less aggressively, and progress faster. Pediatric MS exists. Pregnancy planning matters (most DMTs require washout). The hidden symptoms — fatigue, cognition, mood — are often more disabling than what others see.
Share ItTalk to Kids, Partner, Employer
Kids need plain language and reassurance ("Mom's brain has a treatable disease, the team is on it"). Partners need shared planning across decades. Employers need ADA-honest conversations: cooler workspace, flex hours, fatigue-aware scheduling, occasional MRI days off.
Share ItMentor & Share Insights
The newly-diagnosed person who hears "I have MS, I'm 12 years out, I work full time, I run, here's what I wish I'd known" gets a different prognosis from the one who only hears statistics. NMSS peer-mentor program, MSAA, FFH Network.
Share ItJoin the ROI Study (PHIT)
PHIT — Population Health Impact Tracking. Aggregate & anonymous. Help prove this program reduces relapses, ED visits, disability progression, and unscheduled steroid bursts for MS populations.
Study🩺 Hand-off to my MS Team
Print and bring to your next visit. This page tells your team what you have prepared for, what you want to focus on, and how you would like to participate as an active member of your own care team.
- I am a Prepared Patient in training for MS. I have reviewed all 16 squares of this Force Field Fact Sheet.
- I have started building my Health Passport, my relapse log, my fatigue + symptom diary, and my vitamin D / MRI tracker to bring to every visit.
- I want to teach back what I have learned and have you correct anything I have misunderstood — especially around my DMT choice (high-efficacy vs platform), my relapse vs pseudo-relapse pattern, my MRI interpretation, and when to call the MS team versus the ED.
What helps my visit
Two minutes for me to teach back. One question I prepared. My symptom diary. My med list. Confirm DMT plan, monitoring schedule, vitamin D level on the chart.
What I am working on
DMT adherence · heat management · regular exercise · sleep · vitamin D · smoking cessation · Mediterranean eating · mental health · planning the next decade.
How I want to participate
Shared decisions. Be honest about high-efficacy vs platform trade-offs. Tell me your top 1–2 priorities so we agree. Use AHRQ SHARE Approach. Help me see my MRI, not just hear about it.
🔬 Help Prove This Works — Join the FFH ROI & PHIT Study
The Prepared Patient program is being studied to see whether better preparation actually reduces relapses, unscheduled steroid bursts, ED visits, hospital admissions, disability progression, and total cost of care — for you and for the people in your circle of influence. Your participation is voluntary, your data is aggregated and anonymized, and you can withdraw at any time.
➕ Add-On Force Field Card · Device or Skill Mastery
If your care plan adds a medical device or new skill, bolt on a 5-step Add-On Card. For MS common bolt-ons include: cooling vest, home injection technique (if injectable DMT), infusion-day routine (if infused DMT), bladder self-cath (if needed), home PT program, fall-prevention home audit, MRI day prep, mental-health weekly journal.
Introduce
What it is, why it matters, what it does
Coach
Watch a demo + walk-through
Practice
Do it with a coach watching
Train
Use it daily with a check-in
Test
Demonstrate competence + earn badge
Ready to go deeper?
The Prepared Patient · Multiple Sclerosis course turns this fact sheet into a guided journey: pre/post knowledge checks, relapse vs. pseudo-relapse drills, DMT decision-aid, lifestyle Force Field mastery, comorbidity awareness (including a brief cross-reference to the vascular cluster module), badge tests, and your printable Health Passport. Earn Aware → Active → Certified.