Evergreen
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
I came across an article about Selma Blair, who has MS (Red magazine, March 2026, p.156-7). She described the change since starting a new treatment:
That's what I want from an effective treatment. I want a change in severity.
She has to rest:
but she's also able to box and horse-ride (the latter with an ice vest). She competed in Dancing with the Stars.
I don't need to be able to do those things. I relapsed from apparently-completely-recovered after resuming vigorous exercise. I can live without exercise.
But the degree of change she describes would take me from severe to moderate, maybe even the upper end of moderate. That, I want.
What degree of change would get you excited about a treatment?
Having started the drug cladribine a couple of years ago, she’s now relapse-free. Her most recent brain scan brought the best news yet: ‘No evidence of disease activity.
She still lives with dystonia, some mobility issues and, she says, ‘my speech kind of goes in and out’. But the contrast since starting her current treatment is clear. Rating her symptom severity, ‘I’ve probably gone from an eight to a four and a half, which is a huge difference.’
That's what I want from an effective treatment. I want a change in severity.
She has to rest:
‘I have to rest more than you’d think. I might retire to regroup, to meditate and hopefully get a little sleep, or get in the bathtub.’
but she's also able to box and horse-ride (the latter with an ice vest). She competed in Dancing with the Stars.
I don't need to be able to do those things. I relapsed from apparently-completely-recovered after resuming vigorous exercise. I can live without exercise.
But the degree of change she describes would take me from severe to moderate, maybe even the upper end of moderate. That, I want.
What degree of change would get you excited about a treatment?
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