Posts Tagged ‘Scottish Parliament’

Scottish Vitamin D Summit Captures International Attention

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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Scottish Vitamin D Summit Captures International Attention

For immediate release : July 21st 2010

Shine on Scotland campaigners and the MS Society Scotland held productive talks with the Scottish Government yesterday as planning continues for the Scottish Summit on Vitamin D and MS which will take place in Glasgow in September.

Cabinet Secretary for Health and Wellbeing Nicola Sturgeon will open the event at which international researchers and scientists will be present to discuss the latest research on vitamin D and the implications for public health policy in Scotland.

In recent weeks more researchers from as far afield as Australia have confirmed their attendance at the summit.  International media organisations have also expressed an interest in the event which looks set to be high profile.

Looking ahead to September, Ryan McLaughlin said:

“It’s incredibly exciting that it’s now so close.  A lot of work has gone into the campaign and hopefully this summit will make a real difference.  The Scottish Government and Parliament have been very supportive of the campaign and it’s great to have reached this stage”.

Craig Wilkie, Head of Policy and Communications at MS Society Scotland also attended the meeting at St Andrews House:

“The Summit is a great opportunity to bring internationally renowned researchers to Scotland to discuss a hugely important public health issue.  The focus will be a practical one in terms of public health policy and we have the chance to learn lessons from other countries and make a significant contribution to the health of the nation”.

Call for vitamin D programme to help fight MS

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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ryantimesonlineScientists studying the high incidence of multiple sclerosis in Scotland have urged the Holyrood Government to introduce a nationwide programme of vitamin D supplements for pregnant women and children to help combat the disease.

Under the heading Vitamin D: hope on the horizon for MS prevention? the June issue of The Lancet Neurology insists the benefits of supplementation outweigh any potential side effects and concludes “given the low costs, low toxicity … steps to tackle vitamin D deficiency in high-risk populations seem warranted.”

Vitamin D is sometimes known as the “sunshine drug”. The new research specifically identifies Scotland among a number of high-latitude countries — with long, dark winters — that have a higher than average incidence of MS. Around 10,500 people in Scotland have the disease which is the country’s most common disabling neurological condition, typically affecting sufferers from their late 20s and 30s.

The Lancet’s intervention follows a succession of studies which have demonstrated the link between Vitamin D deficiency and a number of health conditions, including rickets, type 1 (or early onset) diabetes, heart disease, infectious diseases and some forms of cancer.

The authors of the report concede that the link between Vitamin D deficiency and MS is not definitively proved, but add that assembling data on MS prevention could take decades. They argue that dietary supplement were likely to provide wider health benefits that would quickly result in a reduction in government health spending.

Welcoming the findings, David McNiven of the MS Society Scotland said his organisation would continue to support the Shine on Scotland campaign, lobbying for Vitamin D Supplements.

“The Lancet article is very encouraging because it endorses the arguments that we have been making: that vitamin D supplementation represents a low-cost, low-risk public health intervention with potentially massive benefits,” said Mr McNiven.

The new research leaves little doubt of the wider benefits of supplementation. The authors write: “If the predicted effects of raising serum vitamin D concentrations … are realised, the potential savings have been estimated to be £160 billion from the direct and indirect burden of the disease, set against an expenditure of £8.5 billion on testing and public education.”

The paper concludes: “Because any benefits for MS in particular will take decades to emerge, a long-term outlook is needed from policymakers, but future health and financial benefits have the potential to make this investment highly rewarding.”

Last year, researchers in North America suggested that high doses of vitamin D could dramatically cut the relapse rate in people with multiple sclerosis. According to scientists in Canada, more than a third of sufferers taking high levels of supplementation did not fall ill during the period of the trial, representing a marked change in the pattern of their disease.

Like Scotland, Canada has a high rate of MS and there is growing evidence that this is connected to a cloudy climate, where weaker ultraviolet B rays during the winter months are insufficient for people to produce enough Vitamin D.

Neurologists at the University of Toronto, studied 25 people with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis. During the year of treatment 40 per cent of patients on the low dose of vitamin D (1,000 international units daily) experienced a relapse compared to only 16 per cent of those in the high dose (14,000 IU daily) group.

People taking the high dose of vitamin D suffered 41 per cent fewer relapses than the year before the study began, compared with 17 per cent of those taking typical doses. Dr Burton found that those taking high doses of vitamin D did not suffer any significant side effects.

The MS Society Scotland has organised an international summit in September, where the link between vitamin D deficiency and the disease will be discussed. They hope to persuade Scottish ministers to take action on vitamin D as a pressing public health issue.

article published by The Times

Scottish Parliament report

Friday, June 11th, 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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Ryan McLaughlin and the Shine on Scotland campaign to prevent MS through a vitamin D supplementation program is highlighted in the annual report of the Scottish Parliament Petitions Committee.

The report states ” Such was this impact that Ryan features on the front of our new petitions Q&A leaflet”, Petitioning the Scottish Parliament: making your voice heard

Ryan felt honored and humbled to be featured on the brochure and in the video,  he is very thankful for the great work that has been done to make a difference for MS by  the members of the committee and the continued support given to him.

‘I hope that other children will be inspired to fight for Scotland and make your voice heard at the Scottish Parliament’.

Vitamin D on horizon for MS prevention?

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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25.05.10

The Lancet Neurology contains a review of evidence on vitamin D deficiency as a possible risk factor for MS

The lancet

The worldwide prevalence and incidence of multiple sclerosis (MS) are on the increase. The need for strategies to prevent this devastating disease is therefore greater than ever. As highlighted in a Review in this issue of The Lancet Neurology, vitamin D deficiency might be an important modifiable risk factor for MS.
This raises the question of whether population-wide supplementation programmes might be a reasonable prevention strategy.

Vitamin D deficiency is especially common in high latitude regions, such as northern USA, Canada, northern Europe, and New Zealand, where weaker ultraviolet B rays during winter months are insufficient for people to produce enough vitamin D. Vitamin D deficiency has traditionally been linked to bone diseases such as rickets; in addition to MS, links with other diseases such as type 1 diabetes, heart disease, infectious diseases, and some types of cancer are now emerging.

Pregnant women, young children, and the elderly are at the greatest risk. Vitamin D deficiency might also adversely affect disease course in many disorders, including MS, although evidence for this is less robust.

The main sources of vitamin D are sunlight and diet, but many people do not get sufficient amounts, so dietary supplements are required.

The current recommended daily intake of vitamin D is typically 200—400 IU/day in Europe, and in the USA and Canada, where some foods are fortified with vitamin D, the recommendation is for 200—600 IU/day.

The US National Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Medicine is currently reviewing the dietary reference intakes for vitamin D and calcium and is due to report its recommendations at the end of summer 2010.

Expert recommendations for optimum serum vitamin D concentrations range from 50 nmol/L to 100 nmol/L; the total daily need for vitamin D, from sunshine, diet, and supplementation, to achieve this concentration is thought to be 1000—4000 IU/day, depending on factors such as age, geographical region, and health status. The risks of taking high doses of vitamin D are thought to be low, and the main concern of overdose is hypercalcaemia.

However, given that an adult who spends 20 min in summer sunshine can produce an oral intake equivalent of about 10 000 IU/day, the suggested dose of 1000—4000 IU/day is unlikely to be toxic.

Recent evidence suggests that prolonged intake of 10 000 IU/day (and even up to 40 000 IU/day) poses no risk for adults. So far, the evidence for a protective effect of vitamin D on MS largely comes from ecological and observational studies, although evidence is accumulating on possible mechanisms linking vitamin D deficiency and autoimmunity.

Large-scale, long-term randomised controlled trials on high-dose vitamin D supplementation would be needed to definitively establish a protective effect and to identify any unexpected long-term complications. But it could take decades before data on MS prevention become available.

In the meantime, because the risks seem to be low, is there already a case for widespread vitamin D supplementation?

Scotland is one such region where the prevalence and incidence of MS, and other diseases related to vitamin D deficiency, are already so high that the benefits of supplementation are likely to outweigh any potential side-effects. During an upcoming summit in Scotland, hosted by MS Society Scotland and resulting from the Shine on Scotland campaign, researchers will present the case to Scottish Government officials for vitamin D supplements to be made freely available for all young children and pregnant women.

As vitamin D is an inexpensive supplement, the potential cost savings of such a programme are enormous, and in addition to MS, might have implications for numerous diseases linked to vitamin D deficiency.

In Europe, if the predicted effects of raising serum vitamin D concentrations to 100 nmol/L are realised, the potential savings have been estimated to be €187 billion per year from the direct and indirect burden of disease, set against an expenditure of €10 billion on testing and public education.

As well as the possible health benefits, such a supplementation programme might provide important research opportunities to understand the long-term effects of vitamin D.

Trials are needed to address the numerous questions that remain to be answered about dosing levels, potential long-term complications, and causal mechanisms, among others. In the meantime, given the low costs, low toxicity, and possible beneficial effects of supplementation programmes, steps to tackle vitamin D deficiency in high-risk populations seem warranted.

Because any benefits for MS in particular will take decades to emerge, a long-term outlook is needed from policy makers, but future health and financial benefits have the potential to make this investment highly rewarding.

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I would like to thank the The lancet for its brilliant work undertaken for our future children health and to be done by a highly regarded institution – is just amazing .

I am honored and forever grateful.

Thankyou – Ryan McLaughlin
Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Limited. All rights reserved. The Lancet ® is a registered trademark of Elsevier Properties S.A. used under licence.

Free vitamins extended to more families

Sunday, April 11th, 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,
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Free vitamins are being given to children up to the age of four and all pregnant and breastfeeding women, under a new scheme being piloted in Scotland and Wales after the Scotand took the lead in tackling the growing problem of vitamin D deficiency.

The Healthy Start vitamins are currently available to low income families, however availability of the supplements have been well highlighted by 14 year old schoolboy Ryan Mclaughlin who started the ‘Shine on Scotland‘ campaign to get free vitamin D for all kids in Scotland to prevent Multiple Sclerosis.

The 14 year old school boys campaign has now become a global success spread through the social networks and is now known worldwide.  Several countries are now following Scottish Governments lead including Wales and Ireland who announced similar plans to Scotland just last week .

Last week the Welsh Health Minister Edwina Hart said, ‘In the UK, half of all children under five are reported to have not enough vitamin A in their diet and there are several reports of young children suffering from serious vitamin D deficiency. These vitamins are needed for normal healthy growth and development.’

Ryan Mclaughlin said ‘ The problem is even worse than even I first thought, however we are making progress to tackle the issue and the Scottish Government has taken the lead, I am proud to see that Wales and Ireland have followed Scotland on this major health issue’

Results from the pilot will be reviewed after a year, and if shown successful, the programme will be rolled out across Scotland and Wales.

Healthy Start is a UK-wide scheme that provides vouchers to low-income families to spend on milk, fresh fruit and vegetables and infant formula.

The provision of free Healthy Start vitamin supplements has been piloted in three areas of England and in NHS Fife and NHS Tayside in Scotland.

Ryan Mclaughlin said ‘ This is a great start to achieving the goals for free vitamin D for every child in Scotland, however my campaign has now become global campaign and its about more than just scots kids and I am slightly concerned that a few UK politicians are simply against giving away Free Health Start vitamins despite the potential to save the NHS billions over 10 years for a 1p a day investment in our children’.  Ryan insisted ‘I’ll be visiting and educating these politicians over the coming weeks, I will not let this issue slide’.

The MS Society Scotland  is hosting a International scientific summit on vitamin D and the links to multiple sclerosis on the 27th April in Glasgow supported by the Scottish Government.

High levels of vitamin D halve the risk of developing heart disease and diabetes

Friday, February 19th, 2010 | Tags: , , , ,
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People with high levels of vitamin D almost halve their risk of developing heart disease or diabetes, claim researchers.

They found those with lowest levels of the vitamin in their blood were at greater risk of a range of serious disorders.

The findings come from a review of 28 existing studies involving almost 100,000 people which looked at vitamin D levels among the middle-aged and elderly.

The research team from Warwick Medical School discovered a 43 per cent lower risk of cardiovascular disease, Type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome among people with high levels of vitamin D.

They claim most people can boost their vitamin D intake through diet and sun exposure – at lest 30 minutes twice a week.

There is mounting evidence that vitamin D could play a vital role in helping prevent disease and stopping elderly people suffering falls.

US researchers last year claimed vitamin D ‘deficiency’ may be to blame for 600,000 cancer cases worldwide each year, particularly in northern European countries where sun exposure levels are relatively low.

The latest study published in the medical journal Maturitas found those with high levels of vitamin D were 33 per cent less at risk of having cardiovascular disease compared to those with low levels.

There was a 55 per cent reduction in risk of Type 2 diabetes and the risk of metabolic syndrome was halved.

‘Overall, we found that high levels of vitamin D are associated with a 43 per cent reduction in cardiometabolic disorders,’ said the researchers.

One of the authors, Dr Johanna Parker, who is currently working in a Birmingham GP practice, said the review excluded people given vitamin D supplements as part of the research, but they may have taken them of their own accord.

She said: ‘We recommend people eat a healthy diet with two to three portions of oily fish a week and five portions of fruit and vegetables.

‘Most, about 90 per cent, of your vitamin D comes from sunshine so we recommend sensible sun exposure in the summer.

‘People should expose themselves for 30 minutes twice a week – this means exposing the face and arms with no sunscreen.

‘This would provide the body with adequate vitamin D.’

Dr Oscar Franco, assistant professor in public health at Warwick Medical School, also worked on the research.

He said: ‘We found that high levels of vitamin D among middle-age and elderly populations are associated with a substantial decrease in cardiovascular disease, Type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome.

‘Targeting vitamin D deficiency in adult populations could potentially slow the current epidemics of cardiometabolic disorders.’

All studies included were published between 1990 and 2009 with the majority published between 2004 and 2009.

Although most people living in northern  are not sufficiently lacking in vitamin D to be classified as deficient, some experts believe blood levels should be higher to optimise health.

The mechanism by which vitamin D works is only partly understood, but it slows the rate of growth of cancer cells and may boost the function of blood vessels or the immune system.

Vitamin D supplements are available in two forms – vitamin D2 and vitamin D3 – researchers recommend vitamin D3 because it is more active and effective.

Vitamin D is found in salmon, tuna and other oily fish, and is routinely added to milk.

In the UK, the Food Standards Agency does not recommend a specific daily dose of vitamin D unless you are elderly, pregnant, Asian, get little sun exposure and eat no meat or oily fish when 10mcg is advised.

It says daily supplements of 25mcg are unlikely to cause harm.

The danger with taking excessive doses for long periods is that the body absorbs too much calcium, which could weaken bones and possibly damage liver and kidneys.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1251246/High-levels-vitamin-D-halve-risk-developing-heart-disease-diabetes.html

UK Milk Has No Effect On Vitamin D Levels

Sunday, February 14th, 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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Recent media reports have covered research announced ahead of the American Academy of Neurology’s (AAN) Annual Meeting in April which suggested that milk during pregnancy may lower a baby’s risk of developing multiple sclerosis (MS) later in life.

The theory from the researchers in Boston, announced in an AAN press release, was based on a survey of American mothers.

It was claimed that MS risk was lower among women born to mothers with high milk or dietary vitamin D intake in pregnancy.

Unfortunately UK media reports focussed on the milk link ; however it is in fact the case that there are only trace elements of vitamin D in milk consumed in this country.

Unlike America, most of Britain’s milk is not fortified with vitamin D and so whatever quantity of milk is ingested, vitamin D levels in the body are likely to remain unaffected.

MS Society Scotland and 14 year old Ryan Mclaughlin announced last week that Scotland will host a international conference on April 27 to discuss the role of vitamin D. The event, to take place in Glasgow, will be opened by Nicola Sturgeon, the Health Secretary. Leading researchers into links between vitamin D deficiency and multiple sclerosis are expected to attend.

Source
Multiple Scleroris Society

Schoolboy’s petition prompts move on MS link to vitamin D

Saturday, February 13th, 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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ryantimesonline

An international conference is to be held in Scotland to discuss the health effects of vitamin D — thanks to the efforts of a 14-year-old schoolboy.

Ryan McLaughlin, from Glasgow, petitioned the Scottish Parliament questioning possible links between vitamin D and multiple sclerosis after discovering that the disease — from which his mother suffers — could be prevalent in Scotland because of vitamin D deficiency caused by a lack of sunlight.

The petition called on ministers to produce guidelines on vitamin D supplements for children and pregnant women, and launch an awareness campaign. As a result of his efforts, the Scottish government recognised “an urgent need” to provide information to health professionals and mothers, and is to launch a campaign.

Ministers also agreed to host a conference on April 27 to discuss the role of vitamin D. The event, to take place in Glasgow, will be opened by Nicola Sturgeon, the Health Secretary. Leading researchers into links between vitamin D deficiency and multiple sclerosis are expected to attend.

Yesterday, as the Public Petitions Committee agreed to close Ryan’s petition, members congratulated him for his achievement. Bill Butler, Ryan’s local MSP, hailed the schoolboy’s effort, saying that “a very great deal of progress” had been made.

The Glasgow Anniesland representative praised the way “Ryan and the McLaughlin family have persuaded the government; and the government has listened to the very sensible suggestions contained in the petition.

“The government has agreed to a co-ordinated programme of action with NHS Scotland to produce guidance on vitamin D, to educate women on its importance, to consider different messages for different groups of people, and to ensure that health professionals are giving correct and consistent advice to pregnant women and new mothers. Not only should the McLaughlin family be congratulated, but also the government for listening.”

He described that as a significant success. An image of Ryan is now featured on promotional literature for the petitions committee. Speaking about the campaign, Ryan said: “After an amazing year in raising both vitamin D and MS awareness, I now have the commitments that I wanted from the Scottish government.

“I applaud the positive action taken by the Scottish government and the support from Deputy First Minister Nicola Sturgeon and Shona Robison, Health and Sports Minister.”

A spokeswoman for the Scottish government said: “We’re keen to learn all we can about any possible links between vitamin D and multiple sclerosis and are keeping a very close eye on all the emerging evidence.”

• Breast cancer is diagnosed more often in the spring and autumn, and less often in the summer, leading researchers to suggest that its season-ality may be connected to vitamin D deficiency. Researchers at the University of South Carolina, who examined 2,921,714 breast cancer cases, also found that the seasonality was increasingly prominent the further away from the equator that the women lived. This implies that lack of sunshine, and therefore vitamin D, was a factor.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/scotland/article7021318.ece

The hunt for healthy answers

Friday, February 5th, 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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Study to probe health benefits of vitamin D, fish oil

Researchers at Harvard Medical School and Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women’s Hospital are leading a five-year nationwide trial to find out whether the dietary supplements vitamin D and fish oil can boost the immune system and fight cancer, heart disease, and a host of other ills.

The “Vitamin D and Omega-3 Trial,” or VITAL, aims to sort out inconclusive and conflicting evidence from earlier research on the effects of the two compounds on human health.

Previous studies have turned up tantalizing clues that the two nutrients can have considerable protective effects. But JoAnn Manson, the VITAL study’s principal investigator, said those trials — and others showing no protective effect — either involved specialized populations, such as those suffering heart disease, or used low dosages, which may have prevented finding a conclusive answer.

The VITAL study is a large-scale, randomized trial involving 20,000 people across the country with no previous history of cancer, heart disease, or stroke, and is designed to test whether vitamin D and the omega-3 fatty acids in fish oil can help to prevent cancer and heart disease. Though cancer and heart disease are the study’s primary therapeutic targets, Manson said the study will also provide information on other ailments, such as diabetes, cognitive decline, depression, and respiratory diseases.

Scientists already know quite a bit about how these nutrients work in the body. Both have powerful anti-inflammatory effects. Vitamin D appears to benefit blood pressure and glucose tolerance, while working to prevent blood vessel growth that allows tumors to enlarge and spread. Omega-3 fatty acids have anti-clotting effects and have been shown to protect against irregular heart rhythms.

Manson, the Elizabeth Fay Brigham Professor of Women’s Health at Harvard Medical School and chief of Brigham and Women’s Hospital’s Division of Preventive Medicine, said the trial will enroll men age 60 or older and women age 65 and up. The older study population was selected because people of those ages are more commonly afflicted with the ailments the study seeks to test.

Researchers began seeking participants in January and will eventually send mailings to more than 1.2 million Americans, including health professionals and members of AARP. Potential participants will undergo a three-month screening before enrolling in the full trial. Participants will be divided into four groups and receive blister packs of daily supplements, along with questionnaires to complete and mail back to researchers. Though some participants may opt to visit nearby clinical centers for more-detailed assessments and to provide blood samples, most can participate entirely by mail.

The groups will receive supplements containing vitamin D, omega-3s, both, or placebos, allowing researchers to examine the effects of vitamin D and omega-3s independently as well as together.

The study’s vitamin D supplements will contain 2,000 international units (IUs) per day, five times the 400 IUs that the U.S. government currently recommends. Manson said most Americans get only about 300 IUs of vitamin D per day through their diet, and even with supplements few get more than 500 or 600 IUs. The human body can manufacture vitamin D when exposed to sunlight — more than 2,000 IUs for someone working lightly clothed in the sun all day — but the increase in people wearing sunblock to ward off skin cancer and the decreased prevalence of children playing outdoors have reduced the amount of vitamin D that many people get from sunlight.

Several other factors are working to further reduce the amount of vitamin D that people get. The increase in children drinking sugar-sweetened beverages instead of milk cuts vitamin D intake. Also, because vitamin D is fat soluble, the obesity epidemic is increasing the amount that is stored in fats in our bodies instead of being freely available.

The supplements will contain about one gram of omega-3s, Manson said, or about twice the amount people would get if they followed the government’s recommendation of two fish meals a week, and about five to 10 times what the typical American usually eats. It’s also about equal to the level in a typical diet in Japan, where heart disease rates are lower.

Manson said it would be unwise for the public to start taking megadoses of the two compounds before the study’s results come out, citing the examples of earlier large-scale trials of vitamins E and C and beta-carotene that showed little benefit of those vitamins in large doses and even suggested some risks. Should the trial turn up protective benefits to vitamin D and omega-3 fatty acids, it would open the door to greater therapeutic use of the compounds, which are easily accessible, unlike a new exotic drug that would require extensive testing.

Manson also plans to explore the role of vitamin D in reducing racial health disparities. The study will seek to enroll enough African Americans to make up a quarter of the study population in an effort to see whether low levels of vitamin D in African Americans are linked to higher incidence of diabetes, heart disease, and other chronic diseases and whether treatment with vitamin D can reduce these risks.

“It’s exciting to get started with this trial,” Manson said. “We’re really hoping it will provide important answers.”

Ryan Mclaughlin will take the plunge for Glasgow MS Charity

Monday, February 1st, 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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big zip

14 year old Ryan McLaughlin will do a Zip slide from Forth Road bridge to raise money for Glasgow MS Charity!

Ryan McLaughlin from the Shine on Scotland campaign has offered his support and help to the Glasgow based charity Revive MS Support. Ryan McLaughlin will be taking part in ‘Revive MS support’s ” zip line event and he is gathering people from all over Scotland to help him.

Ryan said – I’ve been working very hard on the campaign for the prevention of MS with vitamin D that I just haven’t had any free time to do anything lately for Revive MS support, but when my mum had  a big relapse a couple of weeks ago Revive MS support was right there for us offering support and treatments.

I know its very important that I don’t forget this amazing charity that looks after my mum and i am honored to help, they have been there for our family right from the day she was diagnosed and I can not and will not let them down.

I have asked all the people on my Facebook  group to help me and I’m proud to say that I’ve now got 14 people that offered to come along do the zip slide and raise at least £100 each which will go towards my target of raising £1500.

A lovely couple who have followed my campaign and have became online friends with my mum have even offered to come all the way from the Isle of Man and take part because they have been so inspired by what the ‘Shine on Scotland’ campaign has achieved in raising awareness of MS.

http://www.revivescotland.org.uk/get-involved/26-adrenaline-events/276-davidrevivemssupportorguk.html