“We Will Go On” Blog by Dan Brooks

My longtime friend Dan Brooks in Riverside reactivated his blog “We Will Go On” in 2016 and moved it to wewillgoon.com.  Dan’s blog has the tagline:

Parkinsonism: Hard to Diagnose.  Harder to live with. 
A blog by a patient with Parkinsonism Plus Syndrome.

In 2006, Dan was diagnosed with multiple system atrophy (MSA), corticobasal syndrome (CBS), and progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP).  As time went on, MSA became the most likely.  It seems that CBS has come back into the picture, however.

Dan recently posted about the confusion over whether he has Parkinson’s Disease, CBS, and MSA.  I’ve copied his post below.

Robin

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www.wewillgoon.com/2017/03/confusion-over-parkinsons-contrasted.html

Confusion Over Parkinson’s Contrasted with CBS and MSA
by Dan Brooks
Saturday, March 4, 2017

I have quite often discussed with some of you in the family, and various friends, about the difference between Parkinson’s Disease and the Atypical Parkinsonian disorders.  I am going to give you a few points to chew on, knowing you are the best ambassadors we have for spreading the word about these rarer forms of Parkinsonism.

Parkinsonism is a condition in which signs and symptoms of Parkinson’s appear in the patient’s disease.  Even though the person may not have Parkinson’s Disease, they have a brain disorder that causes similarly appearing symptoms, including tremors, balance problems, stiffness, walking difficulty and cognitive changes.

Parkinsonism appears with Parkinson’s Plus syndromes such as Multiple System Atrophy, Corticobasal Syndrome and Progressive Supranuclear Palsy.  Since I was first diagnosed in 2006, the neurologist I saw for ten years thought that my condition was one of these three.  As time went on, Multiple System Atrophy became the most likely.  All three of these conditions are determined to be “probable” in life, and are confirmed after death through a brain tissue study.

Even though I have  Parkinsonism it is not Parkinson’s Disease in the simplest form because the disease process in my brain is more involved than in Parkinson’s.  I have Corticobasal Syndrome (CBS), and it is uncertain if it would be alternatively considered Multiple System Atrophy (MSA).  These have overlapping symptoms and are best described as rarer forms of Parkinson’s.

Has much changed?  Not really, except I have more clarity and certainty of the degenerative brain disease that has taken so much from our lives in the Brooks family.  We are fortunate to have this increased clarity because the neurologist I have been seeing of late is a Movement Disorder specialist, which is a doctor of Neurology who specializes in all things Parkinson’s and Parkinson’s-like.   She saw a clear indication in the results of my DaT Scan which demonstrated that I have Parkinson’s Plus, not simply Parkinson’s Disease.

Parkinson’s Plus has long been the understanding of my condition.  I wrote about this in my book, I WILL GO ON: LIVING WITH A MOVEMENT DISORDER.  The confusion arises because the word “Parkinson’s” appears in both descriptions of the diseases.  Technically, they are different in that Parkinson’s Plus is a faster progressing disease and causes more disability sooner.

That is why I was unable to continue driving and had to retire at 51.  I have difficulty walking with coordination and I struggle with choking on food and liquids.  I also have digestive, urinary, heart rate, blood pressure regulation and body temperature issues.  These are not visible to friends and family so what appears to be a better day, could be a day I am having trouble with my blood pressure or having great difficulty coughing after drinking liquids.

I also have very abnormal horizontal eye movements which are caused by a loss of neurons in the area of the brain that controls eye movement.  At times I see double as a result.

I am so glad that you are interested and are trying to grow in your knowledge.  MSA is a disease I have been identified with for 10 years or more.  I have CBS, but if it were to turn out to be MSA at some point, that would be a very similar prognosis. My greatest concerns are pneumonia, breathing constriction, and urinary infections.  I do not have idiopathic Parkinson’s, but I do have a form of Parkinsonism, and much of the research being done for P.D. will have a benefit and weight heavily on the potential for discoveries that relate to PSP, MSA and CBS syndromes.  I will always identify with my fellow patients who have Parkinson’s Disease, and the support groups for Parkinson’s are virtually the only in person, brick and mortar groups we can attend anywhere near the Riverside, CA area. As always, thanks for reading! — Patient-Online

“Playbook For Managing Problems In Last Chapter Of Life” and planyourlifespan.org

Kaiser Health News (khn.org) publishes a lot of great articles.  Here’s one from today about a “playbook for managing problems in the last chapter of your life.”

Dr. Lee Ann Lindquist, chief of geriatrics at Northwestern’s Feinberg School of Medicine, wondered if people could become better prepared for emergencies — such as a fall, being hospitalized, and a spouse dying or becoming ill — or if people could become better able to plan their futures if health concerns — such as dementia and not being able to keep up one’s home — compromise independence.

According to Dr. Lindquist’s research, seniors don’t do this planning for several reasons:  “I don’t know what to do, I’m uncomfortable asking for help, I’m not at immediate risk of something bad happening, my children will take care of whatever I need, and I’m worried I won’t have enough money, according to a research report published last year.”

To help address the need for planning around these “predictable problems” and the reasons why people don’t plan, Dr. Linquist developed a website, planyourlifespan.org.  The website focuses on three issues — hospitalizations, falling, and developing dementia.

The user is asked a series of questions to obtain preferences.  Here are some examples from the homepage of planyourlifespan.org:

Do you know…
* What your rehabilitation options are after a hospitalization?
* How to connect with local services and resources such as in-home care, Villages, and skilled nursing facilities?
* What steps you can take to help prevent falls?

Communication with family members and management of finances are large parts of the website.

Though the focus is on being prepared to turn 80, 90, or 100, I think this website offers an easy-to-use tool for all families coping with neurological disorders, or anyone wanting to share preferences with their healthcare agent.

Certainly looks worth checking out!

The full article is copied below.

Robin

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khn.org/news/a-playbook-for-managing-problems-in-the-last-chapter-of-your-life/

NAVIGATING AGING
A Playbook For Managing Problems In The Last Chapter Of Your Life
By Judith Graham
Kaiser Health News
March 9, 2017

CHICAGO — At least once a day, Dr. Lee Ann Lindquist gets an urgent phone call.

“Mom fell and is in the hospital,” a concerned middle-aged son might report.

“Dad got lost with the car, and we need to stop him from driving,” a distraught middle-aged daughter may explain.

“We don’t know what to do.”

Lindquist, chief of geriatrics at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine, wondered if people could become better prepared for such emergencies, and so she designed a research project to find out.

The result is a unique website, www.planyourlifespan.org, which helps older adults plan for predictable problems during what Lindquist calls the “last quarter of life” — roughly, from age 75 on.

“Many people plan for retirement,” the energetic physician explained in her office close to Lake Michigan. “They complete a will, assign powers of attorney, pick out a funeral home, and they think they’re done.”

What doesn’t get addressed is how older adults will continue living at home if health-related concerns compromise their independence.

“People don’t want to think about the last 10 or 15 years of their life, and how they’re going to manage,” Lindquist said.

This isn’t end-of-life planning; it’s planning for the period before the end, when health problems become more common.

Lindquist and collaborators began their research by convening focus groups of 68 seniors — mostly women with an average age of 74. Nearly $2 million in funding came from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, created under the Affordable Care Act.

Investigators wanted to know which events might make it difficult for people to remain at home. Seniors named five: being hospitalized, falling, developing dementia, having a spouse fall ill or die, and not being able to keep up their homes.

Yet most participants hadn’t planned for these kinds of events. Investigators asked why.

Among the reasons seniors offered: I don’t know what to do, I’m uncomfortable asking for help, I’m not at immediate risk of something bad happening, my children will take care of whatever I need, and I’m worried I won’t have enough money, according to a research report published last year.

Developing the website came next. Lindquist and her team decided to focus on three issues the focus groups had raised — hospitalizations, falling and developing dementia — and to include sections on communicating with family members and managing finances.

A group of senior advisers rejected the first version: the typeface was too small; the design, too cluttered; and the content, too complex. They didn’t want to be overwhelmed with information; they wanted the material on the site to be practical and concrete.

The final version “forces people to sit down and think about their future in a very helpful and non-threatening way,” said Phyllis Mitzen, 74, who worked on the project and is president of Skyline Village in downtown Chicago, a community organization with about 100 older adult members.

An individual going through the material is asked to consider a series of questions after examining explanatory information and watching short videos of seniors illustrating the issues being discussed. For instance, which rehabilitation facility would you like to go to if you need intensive therapy after a hospitalization?

Who will take care of your pets, mow your lawn or shovel the snow from your sidewalk while you’re away? Who can collect your mail, check on bills to be paid and get medications for you when you return home?

If you begin having memory problems, who can help you manage your bills and finances? Are you willing to wear a medical alert bracelet if you start getting lost? Would you be willing to have a friend or relative check on your driving or have a formal driving evaluation?

If you require more assistance, are you open to having someone come in to help at home? Would you prefer to live with somebody — if so, whom? Would you be willing to move into a senior community?

The goal is to jump-start conversations about these issues, Lindquist said, just as seniors are encouraged to have conversations about end-of-life preferences.

Those looking for deep dives into topics highlighted on the site will have to look elsewhere. Resources listed are spare and some of the material presented — for instance, how Medicare might cover various services — is overly simplified, noted Carol Levine, director of the United Hospital Fund’s Families and Health Care Project in New York City.

Her project has prepared a much more detailed, comprehensive set of guides for family caregivers (nextstepincare.org) about issues such as home care, doctors’ visits, emergency room care, rehabilitation and what to expect during and after a hospitalization. Those materials are full of useful advice and can flesh out issues raised on the Northwestern website.

Those wanting to know more about falls can consult materials prepared by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Institutes of Health.

For dementia, the Alzheimer’s Association and the NIH are good places to start.

As for next steps, Lindquist contemplates disseminating PlanYourLifespan more widely, translating it into Spanish if funding can be secured and possibly expanding it to include more topics.

The point is to “give seniors a voice,” she said. Now, if an older woman breaks a hip and is rushed to surgery, “loved ones run around and usually make decisions without her input — she’s usually too out of it to really weigh in. That doesn’t have to happen, if only people would consider the reality of growing older and plan ahead.”

“Dying to Know: What Patients/Families Want to Know about End of Life Care”

Last week, the Stanford Health Library hosted a lecture on end-of-life care, titled “Dying to Know: What Patients and Families Want to Know about End of Life Care and Issues.”  The speaker was Stanford oncologist Dr. Kavitha Ramchandran, who spoke for about 45-minutes and answered questions for another half hour.

[Update:  The recording is now available on this webpage of the 2017 video library:]

healthlibrary.stanford.edu/lectures/2017.html

Brain Support Network volunteer Denise Dagan joined the lecture via live webcast.   Here’s her report on the highlights of the lecture:

Coincidentally, Dr. Ramchandran covered some of the same information as a couple articles Robin sent recently — the difference between hospice and palliative care, and how to communicate effectively with your doctor about treatment/procedure options.  So, I’ll only highlight a few things here, but it is well worth viewing the whole webinar, as she does speak a bit about the dying process as well, and the audience had a number of interesting questions.

For end of life care conversations, tell your doctor your personal goals for the quality of life or level of recovery you hope to have after a treatment or procedure, and ask which option will best achieve those goals.

Your family may expect you to pursue every curative therapy, while you are exhausted and just want to be able to, “eat ice cream and watch football.”  Even if the family is surprised to hear this, if that’s where you are in your journey, you need to tell your doctor.  It will change the course of the whole conversation with the doctor, and your family.

Interestingly, Dr. Ramchandran views hospice as very flexible.  She recommends it for patients needing good in-home symptom management for a month or so, when she wants them to be in really good shape for the next round of chemo.  If they are, and are willing to try the new chemo, she has them discharged from hospice and begins curative treatment again.  If they aren’t in such good shape, or choose not to continue chemo, they stay in hospice, but they are usually happy about the level of care they are receiving because it is all about making the patient as comfortable as possible.

Hospice will discharge you if your condition improves.  My Dad had Lewy Body Dementia and was in hospice twice for about two years each time.  It was a Godsend.  In between he was in a transitions program that followed his progress and ensured he was readmitted to hospice when his health declined.  Not all hospice programs are created the same.  I recommend a non-profit program.  Get recommendations from your doctor, support group members, friends and family, and interview a couple before you enroll.

Dr. Ramchandran spoke some about the dying process.  Her analogy is to think of the birthing process and a new mother’s idealized expectations about who will be there, how the family will document the event, having a doula, etc.  In reality, neither birth nor dying ever happen in quite the way you want, so you may need The Serenity Prayer:  God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to change the things I can, and wisdom to know the difference.

Denise’s full notes are below.

Robin

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Denise’s Notes from

“Dying to Know: What Patients and Families Want to Know about End of Life Care and Issues”
Stanford Health Library
March 2, 2017
Speaker:  Kavitha Ramchandran, MD, oncologist, Stanford

Disclosure is the action of making new or secret information known.  Families feel they can’t get a straight answer to, “How much time do I have?” even though doctors know information reduces anxiety. Most people do want to know what to expect about their treatment, prognosis, and especially pain. When they know, they make better decisions about how to spend that time and choices about their care.

Why don’t doctors talk about end of life?
Because it makes them uncomfortable to talk about not being able to help anymore.  It means you will die, and that’s sad, even for them.  Doctors don’t always know the prognosis.  Especially with new treatments, doctors don’t know how well it will work.

Now that you know, what comes to mind?
– What is dying process like?
– How much of a loss of control will I have over my body, my decisions, my quality of life, my pain, etc.?
– How will my treatments and death affect those I love?
– How will others react to me if I lose my hair, are unable to speak, or when I am the one who’s dying, etc.?
– Will I be isolated during treatment, hospice, or death?
– What is the meaning of my life, now that I can see the end?

Do I have a say in where I die, in having every treatment available, in treating my pain effectively, etc.?  People like to be in control.

Goals of Care / Informed consent – means does your health care meet your personal goals?
– Good health care should ensure education and understanding – ask, tell, ask should be the process for the conversation.  One problem with the way conversations usually go, is that the doctor is speaking medical-ese, and the patient does not understand.  When the patient doesn’t understand, they don’t know what questions to ask, so they are still in the dark after they talk with their doctor.  The doctor should:
– ASK what you understand about your condition,
– then have you TELL them what you understand,
– finally ASK what questions you still have.

– Another way to make sure both the doctor and patient is on the same page is to ask the patient what their expectations are/what they still want to be able to do, following a recommended treatment or procedure.

– Ask your doctor for a concrete recommendation, rather than them giving you percentages and statistics about several options.  Hold their feet to the fire for an answer of which they actually recommend.  For them to evaluate the options with your goals in mind, you need to tell them what’s important for you to be able to do after a procedure or treatment.  Without that information they are guessing at which option is best for you.

Advance Directive for Healthcare is a legal document to designate your medical decision maker, and to document code status.  It should be coupled with the POLST form for those who choose DNR, because it won’t be available with your decision maker at the place of emergency where EMTs are working.  POLST is for EMTs.  Keep it on you or display it prominently in your home.

End of Life Options Act / Death with Dignity Act is now in 5 states.  For your application to qualify, you must:
* have less than 6 months prognosis
* be able to administer the life-ending medication on your own
* have the approval of two physicians
* be over 18-years-old
* be of sound mind

Hospice provides care for patients who are seriously ill.  If they say I do not want to be in pain and will take sedation not to be in pain, it is hospice’s highest priority to do that, even if the patient’s life is somewhat shortened in the process.  It is called palliative sedation.

Palliative care has been equated with end of life/hospice care, but it should not be.  It is caring for anyone with serious illness following or during active treatment.

Palliative care early on improves quality of life, and improves survival.  Probably because, if you’re focused on the next curative treatment you may not tell the doctor that you’re not sleeping, or other peripheral symptoms.  Treating these bothersome peripheral symptoms helps you be strong enough for the curative therapy (chemo, surgery, bone marrow transplant, etc.)

Hospice is one arm of palliative care.  To qualify you must:
* have a prognosis of 6 months or less
* refuse curative treatment (although all other chronic or acute illness is treated)
* agree that pain & symptom management (of all your ailments) is the goal
* understand it doesn’t change your insurance
* understand it is not a place, but those who come to you wherever you are (home, skilled nursing, palliative unit at the hospital)

Good healthcare walks with you from curative & palliative care, followed by hospice care, then death and family bereavement care.

The Dying Process:
Think of the birthing process and all a new mother’s expectation of who will be there, filming the event, a doula, etc.  Neither birth, nor dying ever happen in quite the way you want, so you may need the Serenity Prayer:  God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to change the things I can, and wisdom to know the difference.

Give me the details…  What will I experience?  Is it be scary?  How will it effect my kids, my husband? Sometimes the patient doesn’t want to know, but the spouse does. Doctors only know so much, but they can answer some questions.

People are most afraid of pain.  It can usually be controlled, 80% of the time.

There may also be secretions, restlessness, confusion.  It can be upsetting for family members.  Its very sad to see the person they knew slipping away.

What is the body doing?
– Shutting down:  skin feels cool, clammy; decreased urination, no appetite, no need for fluids; being in bed is normal; sleeping a lot is normal

Question & Answer:

Can EMS check for troponin levels to tell if it’s a heart attack?
Hospital, because it takes time and a lab.

Death with dignity act and whether starving yourself is a peaceful way to die if you can’t get the prescription?
Each person has their own view of what is suffering, so they can stop eating.  That can take weeks, especially if they’ve just been in the hospital with loads of fluids from IVs.  Those who use the death with dignity act don’t want the dying process.  They want control over the timing of their own death.  If they ask for the prescription because they are afraid of pain the doctor should address how well pain can be managed in their situation.

Is palliative care a new specialty?  Why is palliative care sometimes offered in the hospital and sometimes not?
Palliative care is the new ‘old’ medicine is, “Care always, cure sometimes.”  A palliative care clinic is a new thing.

What is the name of the most popular aid in dying medication today, who makes it, and how do you order it?
California is trying a few different versions because some are too expensive for insurances to be willing to cover it.  Only a few pharmacies are filling it, right now.

Is there a book on how to counsel families through an advance directive?
The conversation project website walks you through preparing an advance directive.  The letter project has patients and families write a letter to their doctor about their wishes.
Hard choices for loving families is a good book.

It’s a burden to loved ones if you have a serious illness and are being cared for at home.  The circumstances can be undignified.
Alternative is skilled nursing, but asking the patient if they mind being in the middle of the living room in a hospital bed, etc. will help get everyone on the same page.  Sometimes patients continue to try curative therapies because they feel the family expects them to.  Having a frank conversation about what the patient wants is important.

If 80% of pain can be managed in the dying process, what about the 20%?
Admission to a clinic for pain specifically, an epidural, if those fail they use sedation which hastens death somewhat.

Does palliative sedation need to be in an advance directive?
No but the conversation about sedation should happen with family so they know your wishes as your decision maker.  That helps the doctor, too, because they don’t want to assume one way or the other.

So many people are living into their 90’s and they keep coming into the ER, so how do you handle that?
It would be nice to re-examine home-based care.  That is why some doctors recommend hospice, because it brings care to your home.  When the same person has been into the ER a few times, it usually means things are not going well at home, so setting up hospice for them can really help them feel better and stay out of the ER with that added expense and hassle.  The POLST form has multiple components but it is basically a home-based DNR.  It must be signed by a doctor or nurse practitioner.

Are all physicians bound by the end of life options act?
No.  It is hard to find a doctor that will do it.  Most clinics have designated one physician to handle all requests because most don’t want to deal with it.  The Ethics Team can start the process for you at Stanford.

Who qualifies for palliative care?
People with significant symptom management need, especially with a psycho-social need with their family. A palliative care team includes doctors, nurses, social workers, clergy, psychologists

Have people stopped eating and drinking to hasten the end of their life, or an overdose of morphine?
Yes, she has known people who have stopped nourishment, but most patients at Stanford are looking for cures.  Oncology doctors have been overdosing morphine for decades before the End of Life Options Act was passed.  She believes in having the conversations with families early and often to meet the family’s specific goals.

When people change settings you lose a team you trust and have to adjust to a new healthcare team.
Yes.  Sometimes nobody is leading the team.  The speaker asks patients who their point of trust in the new place.  Sometimes it’s a nurse practitioner, but someone who keeps track of their care and can communicate with the facility.

Can you request palliative care in the hospital or at home before hospice.
Yes.  Hospice agencies may do the palliative care at home (bridge programs) but they may not be able to do as much as you want them to do under that type of program.

If you develop a urinary tract infection under hospice, will they treat it and take you go back to the hospital?
Yes, they would treat it because that would make the patient feel better.  They would probably not take you back to the hospital unless treatment at home isn’t working.  Hospice will not treat the underlying diagnosis for the hospice care (cancer, heart failure, etc.) Hospice is not a one-way street.  If you improve you will be discharged from hospice.  If/when you decline again, you will be readmitted. Average time in hospice is 3-4 days because people are reluctant to admit they are nearing death.  It should, instead, be the best home-based symptom management.

Friend alone with stage four cancer who knows nothing about palliative care.  How to tell him?
He should ask his primary care physician for a palliative care referral.  The speaker’s clinic prefers to begin care early on in cancer treatment so they know them throughout the course of their disease treatment.  Familiarity improves palliative care.

“How to Get Patients to Take More Control of Their Medical Decisions” (WSJ)

This long article in the Wall Street Journal (wsj.com) is about three ways researchers have come up with to get patients more involved in their medical decisions.  The three ways focus on:

* a clearer look at the options using decision aides, such as pamphlets, interactive programs, and videos

* making complex information simpler by expressing risk as absolute risk, by creating graphics that show risk information, and by considering therapy options one at a time

* lifting the electronic-records curtain by providing access to medical records, test records, and even physician notes

The webpage has a link to a 10-minute podcast about the article.  That’s probably sufficient for most of us.

Here’s a link to the full article:

 
Health Care
How to Get Patients to Take More Control of Their Medical Decisions
For years, people have been urged be more active in their own care. Now providers are giving them better tools to make that happen.
By Laura Landro
Wall Street Journal
Updated Feb. 28, 2017 12:23 p.m. ET 

Robin

“The stigma of a neurologic disorder can be stressful” (Neurology Now)

This is an interesting article from 2015 in the magazine Neurology Now (journals.lww.com/neurologynow) about the “stigma of a neurologic disorder.”  The article contains input from patients, physicians, and researchers about turning “negative reactions into positive encounters” and turning “staring into caring.”

Brain Support Network volunteer Denise Dagan read over the article recently.  Here are some highlights from her perspective:

Patrick Corrigan, PsyD, principal investigator at the National Consortium on Stigma and Empowerment and professor of psychology at the Illinois Institute of Technology, advocates for more “face time” between patients with neurologic disorders and the general public.  He advises people to “meet and get to know that person with the disorder. Sitting at church or working alongside someone can disarm prejudice and reframe misconceptions, while combining different points of view,” he says.

If you are a person with a neurologic disorder, he recommends:

* Get connected with others dealing with the same challenges so you don’t feel alone.  Learn coping mechanisms together by modeling each other’s behaviors.

* Be kind to yourself.  “Self-stigma is an egregious impact of stigma in general, a diminished sense of self-esteem leading to a ‘Why try?’ attitude in many people,”

* Dare to Share. Talking openly about symptoms can take a bite out of stigma and its effects.  Stephanie Schroeder has Tourette’s.  She says, “What does bother me is the amount of negative energy other people spend trying to shame me… It says more about them than about me or the disorder.”  Nancy Mulhearn was diagnosed with Parkinson’s at age 44. For years she denied the disease and hid her symptoms.  “I didn’t want to be pitied or stared at.”  Now, as for strangers’ curiosity, she addresses it head-on.  “If I’m fumbling for change, I say, ‘I have Parkinson’s disease,’” she explains. “I could go hide, but if other people see I’m OK with this, they’re usually OK, too.”

In the “Countering the Culture” section of the article, there is a lovely story about people educating those around them to overwrite misinformation about their disease in their community and getting a very supportive response.

The “Fighting Skepticism” section of the article talks about how you can scream at the top of your lungs about your symptoms and how they affect your ability to function in the world, and still be unheard.  So, when consulting with headache patients, Dr. Chatterjee invites the entire family to learn more about what their loved one is experiencing. “I think 99 percent of the time, when you clearly explain this condition [migraine], a person’s attitude changes from one of cynicism to extreme support,”

The last two sections, “Battling Bias” and “Know the Basics,” discuss how physical symptoms may affect aspects of life such as work, school, play, leisure, and intimacy, and for those who want and need to work who are dogged by the question: to tell or not to tell?  Rights under the Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990 are briefly outlined.

Here’s a link to the article:

tools.aan.com/elibrary/neurologynow/?event=home.showArticle&id=ovid.com:/bib/ovftdb/01222928-201511010-00017

Turn Staring Into Caring: The stigma of a neurologic disorder can be stressful—and can make symptoms worse. Patients and doctors teach us how to turn negative reactions into positive encounters.
Neurology Now
February/March 2015; Volume 11(1); P 34–38
by Stephanie Stephens

Lots to think about!

Robin