Category Archives: Living Well

Looking Back To Better Plot Our Future

K looks out the front door despite being legally blind.  She has some sense of what lays in front of her.  It's a walk she does all the time.  Sometimes, we don't have to know or be able to see the details to know where we want to go.
K looks out the front door despite being legally blind. She has some sense of what lays in front of her. It’s a walk she does all the time. Sometimes, we don’t have to know or be able to see the details to know where we want to go.

We are all blind to the future.  Our ability to predict is limited to extrapolating from what has happened recently.  So often, living with a chronic, progressing  condition requires us to make the best choice we can with the information at our finger tips.  If we are introspective enough, we may look back to see the clearest path to better light the way for those behind us.

This past week, I was lucky enough to read about two such reviews of past events.  One was an MS study looking at the impact of delaying treatment of MS by 3 to 5 years versus beginning treatment immediately on deaths due to “MS complications” over 21 years.  The other study was a study of Harvard graduates over 75 years in an attempt to discover what men need to be happy.

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http://multiple-sclerosis-research.blogspot.com/2014/03/cause-of-death-on-interferon-beta.html

On the MS study, it was conducted from 1990 to 2011 looking at the effects of early treatment for MS patients with interferon-beta.  Realize, 1990 was the beginning of a decade which brought us many advancements in MS care, and care for MS has come a long way in the last 20 years.  For the trial, half the patients were given interferon-beta, and the other half were given a placebo.  After three years to five years, the placebo group received  interferon-beta.  I know it is often said to patients, “ MS is not fatal.”  However, of the 69 patients who died in the intervening 21 years, 78% were judged to have died from “MS related complications” including such things as swallowing problems leading to pneumonia, urinary dysfunction leading to UTI’s and septicaemia, falls with fractures, etc.    The mean age-at-death was less than 52 years for the participants who died.  Those in the placebo group experienced an excessive number of MS-related deaths. 

Keep in mind, interferon-beta is less effective than many front line MS treatments now.  In the past, I have advocated against the strict use of dots on an MRI determining the efficacy of an MS treatment.  I want some measures of mobility and cognitive ability to assess whether a drug works.  There have been a few studies casting doubt upon whether our current front line meds work  in terms of preventing disability, but living or dying of MS complications seems like a great measure of drugs efficacy.  The biggest hurdle to using it as an end point is the time it takes to learn the truth.  This was a result from 21 years of patient data.  Still, it seems this study shows the value of dealing with MS as best we can, as soon as we can.  The failure to do so might just kill us, even if we do not understand the exact mechanism by which slowing our MS prolongs our lives.

To my mind, it comes back to my old motto, “Do what you can when you can until you can’t.  Then go to bed knowing you have done all you could, and tomorrow will arrive anyway.”    As I read this study, the ending could be changed to “…OR tomorrow’s tomorrow  may not arrive at all for you.”

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http://www.feelguide.com/2013/04/29/75-years-in-th-making-harvard-just-released-its-epic-study-on-what-men-require-to-live-a-happy-life/

The second study, the one of Harvard graduates, began in 1938 began with over 200 Harvard men and tracked them into their nineties, well beyond traditional retirement years.  It tracked a huge number of variables from political leanings to social lives to various physical conditions.  The study is fascinating if only to track a cohort of men through their lives. 

It’s not exactly a representative sample. The  sample isn’t just college educated men. It’s men privileged enough to go to Harvard. When it talked about the drop in average salary from bad choices, I kept thinking my grandparents would have liked to have a salary big enough to have so far to fall. However, I think many of the points likely apply to us all. Drink and drugs were the mostly likely to derail a good life. The warmth of our relationships in large part determine our happiness, and our health in old age is mostly determined by our decisions and habits as adults not our genetic make-up.

I think of this study with respect to MS, and it is a bit terrifying.  According to the MSresearch blog, MS patients are twice a likely to divorce as healthy people.  Many MS patients become clinically depressed.  So often our ability to relate to health fades.  I no longer remember what it is to be without pain, to be clear headed, to feel strong.  Maintaining warmth in our relationships is a challenge to all sides.  Yet, I can tell you the warmth of my relationships maintains me and my peace of mind.

I would like to think some of my habits will help me as/if  I age.  In the study men’s old age health was better linked with their choices than their genetics.  Towards that end, what began with taking stairs rather than elevators has progressed to running and rowing three or four days a week.  My family has a history of heart disease and cancer, but if one believes this study, what I do matters more.

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As I thought about these two studies this week and doing what seems best with the limited information I have when I don’t have all the answers, I think of this quote:

…I would like to beg you dear Sir, as well as I can, to have patience with everything unresolved in your heart and to try to love the questions themselves as if they were locked rooms or books written in a very foreign language. Don’t search for the answers, which could not be given to you now, because you would not be able to live them. And the point is to live everything. Live the questions now. Perhaps then, someday far in the future, you will gradually, without even noticing it, live your way into the answer.”

Rainer Maria Rilke, 1903

Maybe these two studies will let us see a tiny sliver of the answer.  If we are lucky, maybe we will live our way to the next peace of the puzzle.  If we are truly fortunate, we may even have a  chance to light an easier path for those who come after us.

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A Dream 50 Years Later



This past week we had the 50th anniversary of one of the most famous speeches in American history. It wasn’t covered live on TV as it was given, but over time, it has grown to an epic statement of where we wish our country to be in terms of race relations.  It’s grown so much racial import in many peoples’ eyes, they forget he spoke of income and jobs topics about which we have yet to reach consensus.  When I think of King’s Dream speech, I am reminded of the Gallup poll at the time saying only a third of American’s supported him and his ideas.  Then I think of a quote from Andrew Bridge in Hope’s Boy,
“Some people are born for battles.  Their bravery endures, regardless of frailty or strength.  They are the ones we look to and our admiring hearts tell us, “They’ll know what to do.”  They are the great winners and losers of history.  We remember them less for their outcomes than for their glorious acts.  And, with the gentle wash of time, they become our heroes.”

Who denies MLK hero status today?

As we hit the 50 years mark since the speech, I remember this time while longer than my life, is but a blip in humanity’s quest for fairness.  Then I realize if we arrived, we would no longer care, for we would take it for granted.  It is a little ironic that if we reach the goal, we will no longer attempt to recognize and make up for past misdeeds. Doing so puts us back on uneven ground as we try to make amends.  Think of all the white men who think minority poor are better off than the white poor.  To arrive at the goal of fair equality could only happen by starting over. 

If we ever find ourselves (back) in a spot where there is no improvement to be made, I submit maintaining the status quo will require us to lose what it is to be human, to strive to make better the realities in which we live.  At least these thoughts seem to be the epitome of what it is to be American.  I suspect if we ever go back, somebody will still bite the apple in an effort to find a “better.” 
 
After all, what’s more American than apple pie?
 
(continue to next page for two random thoughts)
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 I saw a post from Montel Williams this week asking what “Living well” means.  Since I spend a lot of my life looking for the answer, I gave the closest answer I’ve come up with thus far.

Living well is learning to recognize the gifts we receive and give, followed by thinking how to best enjoy them.  

Living well is learning to love learning and then figuring out a way to pass along both the love and the knowledge.

Living well is recognizing the love we give and receive. 

Living well is valuing both. 

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A very cool thing happened recently.  I was asked by Patientslikeme. com to go downtown so I can represent the patients’ perspective on a panel at the Global Forum on Innovation in Health Professional Education.  The conference is being put together by the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies.
 
http://www.iom.edu/activities/global/innovationhealthprofeducation.aspx

I’m excited.  Looking at some of the people and their positions, I want to go just to hear what they say.  I’m fascinated.

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