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I am a parent with MS

As a parent with multiple sclerosis, you may have some questions about how to explain MS to your children or concerns about how your children will cope with MS in the family. Multiple sclerosis may affect family roles and may change some of the ways that you spend time with your children. But MS does not affect the most important part of being a parent: your ability to provide your children with love, guidance and support.

A diagnosis of multiple sclerosis affects all family members. Children whose parents have MS react in different ways and need their parents’ support to adjust to the changes that MS may bring.

Every child and every family is unique – and there is no one “right way” to talk about MS with children. Children often sense when something is different at home and their imagination may cause worries or fears that are unfounded. It is very important that you talk about your illness with them. Be open and honest, as well as sensitive to your child’s age, level of maturity and personality.

As a parent, you will want to be familiar with multiple sclerosis so that you can answer your children’s questions. Visit Multiple Sclerosis to find out more about the disease. We also have a variety of publications and other resources to help you talk about MS with your children.

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Growing Up Strong: Supporting the children of parents with MS

Multiple sclerosis affects not just the person diagnosed with the disease, but the entire family. Dealing with an unpredictable chronic disease, the changes it can bring, its costs and the many choices to be made, puts a lot of stress on all family members. No two families are alike: they have different needs, emotional styles and ways to cope with the disease. However, they all have something in common: they try to make room for MS in the family without giving it more space than necessary.

Research, some of it carried out by the MS Society, shows that children cope and adjust relatively well when a parent has MS. However, all children, regardless of their age, have common concerns. They ask themselves whether their parent is going to be okay or if the parent will be able to take care of them (the children) as they did before.

Parents have their own feelings of anxiety and guilt. Because of such feelings, they may tend to underestimate the impact of MS on their children. They may be hesitant to provide information about MS to their children; they may not recognize the need for outside help for their children and/or the family.

Attempting to ignore MS may only create feelings that the disease is something shameful, causing family members to withdraw from each other.

"Communication is key: children need accurate, timely, age-appropriate information from their parents in order to cope well with this disease that has become part of the family," said Dr. Rosalind Kalb from the National MS Society (USA).


Growing Up Strong:
Help for your family


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Learn about children’s usual fears and concerns at different ages.
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Talk to them about MS based on their age, needs, questions and personality.
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Answer all questions in a simple and honest way.
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Adjust the information you provide to your child as s/he grows.
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MS is unpredictable and can change families’ lives: don’t be afraid to seek outside support

From the pre-schooler to the teenager, discussions about MS should be adapted to the child’s age, individual concerns and needs. "Many children do not ask questions but still want information. They may have misconceptions and fears about MS, and want to know how it affects their parent and themselves," said Dr. Brenda Banwell, director of the Pediatric MS Clinic, Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto. "However, children can be overwhelmed by too much information and thus prefer to know less about the disease as a way to cope with it."

It is important to know children’s usual fears and concerns at different ages and answer their questions in a simple and honest way. Educating children about MS as they grow up and mature is an important on-going activity.

Through various programs and services, the MS Society continues to help families stay informed about multiple sclerosis, recognize and accept their feelings about the disease, and communicate comfortably with one another. Publications such as How to Talk About MS with Your Children and Keep Your Balance are two excellent resources for teenagers and parents.

One of the programs that focused mainly on supporting children of parents with MS is Growing Up Strong. As part of this project, children from across Canada took part in educational and recreational programs offered by various chapters and divisions.

Families attended events where they met others living with MS. Students from schools in Edmonton, Calgary, and Ottawa attended presentations about MS and living with a disability or chronic illness. These presentations helped students and teachers understand the challenges children face when a parent has MS. Three new websites were developed as part of this project.

The findings of Growing Up Strong will help chapters and divisions create successful programs for families living with MS. Contact your local chapter to find out more about any events, resources or other activities for your children and family, or call your division office at 1-800-268-7582.

The information in this article is based on presentations of Dr. Rosalind Kalb, National MS Society (USA), and Dr. Brenda Banwell and Jennifer Boyd, R.N., Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, at the Growing Up Strong Conference, November 2004. This article originally appeared in the May 2005 issue of MS Canada.

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MS Society publications

Publications available through the MS Society of Canada that are helpful to children and teens include:

How to Talk about MS with Your Children
A practical guide to help parents communicate better with their children about multiple sclerosis. The booklet may also be useful for anyone who wants to provide help or support to young children or teens who have a parent with multiple sclerosis.

Keep Your Balance! is a colourful publication for teens which includes basic information about MS and testimonies from teens who have a parent with MS. It is intended to help teens understand MS, its impact on the family, and their own feelings about the disease.

Keep S’myelin

My Mommy has MS
This booklet written for pre-school children describes MS and its effects in an easy to understand manner. Written by a mother with MS and her daughter, the booklet also includes a "rainbow activity" that children can prepare with a parent after reading the book. (Illustrations copyright, Michael Speke)

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Websites

These MS Society websites provide age-appropriate information and resources about MS and create an interactive environment where kids, teens or parents living with MS can share and support one another.

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Other helpful resources for parents

Parenthood and MS: Arriving at a decision that works for you
It's common for individuals in their twenties or thirties to consider if and when they will have children. It's a big decision! Add multiple sclerosis to the mix and many women – and men – can feel overwhelmed. What is the right thing to do? And how can you plan with a disease as unpredictable as MS? From the March 2006 issue of MS Canada.

MS in Focus, a bi-annual magazine published by The Multiple Sclerosis International Federation (MSIF) featured a Special Focus on Family. It is available in English, Spanish and German only.


Growing Up Strong:

More information can be found in the following MS Society resources developed as part of the program Growing up Strong: Supporting the Children of Parents with MS:

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line
 
Multiple Sclerosis Society of Canada
Toll free to reach the nearest regional office: 1 800 268-7582

To locate the MS Society office near you, please select your region:

E-mail: info@mssociety.ca
(Please provide your town and province in your e-mail)

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