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NOTICE OF THE RECONVENED ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING OF THE MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS SOCIETY OF IRELAND LIMITED
24th Reconvened National Annual General Meeting (“AGM”) (since incorporation – the Society was founded in 1961) of the Multiple Sclerosis Society of Ireland Limited on Thursday, 30th November 2023 at 8.00 p.m. in the MS Care Centre, 65 Bushy Park Road, Ranelagh, Dublin 6 and via Zoom
NOTICE OF THE RECONVENED ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING OF THE MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS SOCIETY OF IRELAND LIMITED
24th Reconvened National Annual General Meeting (“AGM”) (since incorporation – the Society was founded in 1961) of the Multiple Sclerosis Society of Ireland Limited on Thursday, 30th November 2023 at 8.00 p.m. in the MS Care Centre, 65 Bushy Park Road, Ranelagh, Dublin 6 and via Zoom
MS Readathon ambassador Ciara O'Meara is a lecturer in General Nursing at the University of Galway and has lived with MS for the past 15 years.
We've taken our title from a Rankin/Bass stop-motion Christmas television special. A favourite from the youth of our host, Trevis L Gleason. He'll explain......
Alanna Denny, a PhD candidate from University College Cork is conducting research to understand the lived experiences and perspectives of medication adherence in people with MS in the Republic of Ireland.
Below are a list of travel tips which may be helpful.
Managing your finances is a mainstay of modern life. The need to budget, shop around and ‘spring clean’ your finances is common to all. However, for families living with MS, there can be additional concern as Irish research has shown that those with disabilities incur greater living costs, and this can lead to extra pressure on the bank balance.
Although sexual difficulties can affect the population as a whole, multiple sclerosis (MS) can bring about particular problems for both men and women. Not everyone with MS will experience sexual problems and, as with other MS symptoms, it is impossible to predict who will be affected and how long symptoms may last.
MS can affect your emotions, as well as your body. Although this has been recognised since MS was first described in the 19th century, it is only more recently that we have begun to understand more about how MS can cause changes in mood and feelings.