Skip to main content

Tips to Make Life Easier With MS (Part 1)

Tips to Make Life Easier With MS (Part 1)

Computer Work

I give you advice for the relief of our disease. Tips are directly related to our needs or to our abilities. So follow: Tips to Make Life Easier With MS - Computer Work.

1. Speak, don’t type. “With voice-activated programs, you can just speak and the computer will type what you say”.


2. Go big. If you have trouble pressing keys on a standard keyboard, get one with larger buttons.

3. Replace the mouse. Try an adaptive computer mouse that uses a trackball to move your cursor or is controlled with your foot.


4. Make the screen easier to see. If your MS symptoms include impaired vision, use a screen magnifier to enlarge text and images on your monitor.



5. My adaptation of the computer table. This adaptation enables me at the same time to work on a computer and, if necessary, to practice.



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

My FEELING, My train of THOUGHT (Part 1)

My FEELING, My train of THOUGHT Inspired by thoughts, I am created this my short text, which is engraved in my mind!   Certainly, things like this in  future time will be a lot more!  These short texts best describe our feelings, so read carefully and with .... Just READ The direction of the eye So wrong Avoiding the soul So missing I'm not asking Our existence Just asking Why am I in a war with my hands? Why am I in a war with my feet? Why am I in the war with me? And after all, I'm still going I'm not showing I do not share I do not need it What you have to give, GIVE!

Psychosocial counseling is mandatory

Psychosocial counseling is mandatory People with MS are more prone to stress than other people. With everyday stresses of modern life, MS patients are still threatened by the diagnosis, which only falls into acute stress. As MS is an unpredictable disease, the uncertainty and anticipation of the next aggravation is a particular source of stress. Multiple sclerosis brings with it a change of image about oneself, relationships with family, friends, colleagues. In addressing these problems, the role of psychosocial support and assistance is invaluable. In people living with MS, the problems of psychological nature are more often related to the personality of the diseased, the reaction to illness, and the way of adjusting and reorganizing oneself according to the change that has occurred and which the disease inevitably carries with it, rather than being associated with the illness itself cause of the problem. MS sufferers face loss of health and this loss causes a very stron

ALL ABOUT MS (Part 2)

Types and course of the disease The course of the disease is different and difficult to predict in each person, but over time, as the MS shows certain regularities when the disease is monitored over a longer period of time, most patients can be classified into one of four MS forms. When determining MS forms, knowledge of the previous course of the disease is used to try to predict a further course of the disease. MS forms are: relapse-remitent, secondary progressive, primarily progressive and progressive-relapse form. Relapse-remitent form In 85% to 90% of diseased illnesses begin as a relapse-remitent form. In these patients, unpredictable seizures (so called relapse, exacerbations, mosses, and swabs) are observed, followed by periods when the disease recedes (remission) and in which the patient's condition returns to what was before the attack, and may also be left behind damage. When the patient's condition always returns to what was before the attack, it is usu