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Braveheart inspires Ryan to take MS plea to parliament

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Published Date: 17 June 2009
A SCHOOLBOY whose mother has multiple sclerosis yesterday led hundreds of supporters to the Scottish Parliament to campaign for free vitamin D to to help combat the illness.
Ryan McLaughlin wants young children and pregnant women to be given free vitamin D supplements, believing it can help prevent MS after scientific studies suggested a link.

The 14-year-old, from Drumchapel, Glasgow, said he decided he had to act wh
en he saw his mother suffering with the incurable disease. His campaign was yesterday supported by the MS Society Scotland.

Ryan said he was inspired by the film Braveheart and by hearing Harry Potter author JK Rowling talk about her mother's battle with MS. He was joined by about 200 supporters, many of them children, in a march down Edinburgh's Royal Mile to the Scottish Parliament.

Speaking before putting his case to Holyrood's petitions committee, he said: "I'm going to parliament to try to give them my insight into how my family's been affected and that vitamin D is the answer, in my opinion, to get through this."

William Wallace's speech in Braveheart about having "just one chance" to make a difference gave him inspiration, he said.

Ryan, who attends Knightswood Secondary School, told how his mother was diagnosed with MS two years ago.

"She was a Tae Kwon Do champion along with myself, and going from that to listening to my mum scream in the middle of the night with pain, it's not a nice thing at all. I decided I can't sit here doing nothing – I need to get something done."

Scotland has one of the highest rates of MS in the world, but the reasons remain unclear. In February, scientists from Oxford University and Canada published research that suggested doses of vitamin D in pregnancy and childhood might reduce the risk of MS in later years.

Ryan said: "We really need it, because MS is a horrible disease. I wouldn't wish it on my worst enemies."

Ryan has used the social networking sites Bebo, Facebook and Twitter to publicise his petition. So far 45 MSPs have backed his campaign.

Ryan's mother Kirsten, 34, said: "Ryan isn't doing this for me, he's doing it for future generations of Scots and that's why I'm so proud of him."

Later, Ryan told the MSPs' committee: "I am Ryan McLaughlin and I have come here today because my mum has multiple sclerosis. It's too late for my mum – we are waiting for a cure."

He said most people in Scotland were vitamin D-deficient for part of the year because of the shortage of sunshine.

"It would cost just a penny per child to ensure that every child in Scotland received the vitamin D they need," Ryan added.

Ryan's father, Alan, suggested adding vitamin D supplements to school milk. "This would be one way of ensuring every child gets protection," he said.

David McNiven, director of MS Society Scotland, said: "

Given the research evidence linking environmental factors with genes involved in MS, and other evidence about the benefits of vitamin D, we are happy to be supporting Ryan's campaign."



SCOTS SUFFER WORSE

A CAMPAIGN to encourage the use of vitamin D to combat multiple sclerosis was spurred by an influential study published earlier this year.

Scientists suggested taking vitamin D supplements during pregnancy and in the early years of life could reduce the risk of developing MS

Researchers from Oxford University and the University of British Columbia in Canada discovered that the chances of developing MS are influenced by vitamin D levels coupled with a common gene variant.

Children with the genetic mutation may be more at risk of developing the disease if they lack vitamin D while growing in the womb or during their early years of life.

Vitamin D is produced by the sun's rays reaching the skin, with northern countries with cloudier weather having higher rate of vitamin D deficiency. The findings could help explain why Scotland has one of the highest rates of MS in the world – estimated at up to 200 cases per 100,000 people compared with 120 in England and Wales.





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  • Last Updated: 16 June 2009 10:36 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 17/06/2009 01:08:29

For all that Vitamin D costs, and for all the known Health factors Vitamin D provides, why is it not 'Free' now, and advised about?
Think of all the Money this would save our NHS in the long run, and the suffering it can avoid!

2

W Smith,

Middle East 17/06/2009 03:20:02
Never mind vitamin D - the druggies have to get their methadone.

Wasters first and law abiding sober citizens last.
3

DeeFlymaster,

17/06/2009 08:39:32
I can see a bandwagon developing here. It is well known that MS and many other diseases and conditions can be treated or prevented by vitamin D, both from sunshine and in the diet. But it has to be the right sort. To make profits the food industry will start 'fortifying' foods with vitamin D, as a gimmick, but they will use the cheaper D2, a plant source which our bodies cannot use, hence is worthless but makes a profit for the food industry because people will buy them thinking they are 'healthy'. They will also add it to fat free foods, but vitamin D needs fat to be utilised, it is fat soluble. Vitamin D3, cholecalciferol, is the form our bodies make and use and is more expensive for the amount you need - at least 1000 iu per day. To make it you need the things the health brigade have all but banned - fat, cholesterol and sunshine. You need to eat fish and to eat dairy and get out in the sunshine without sunscreen. A pill just won't do it alone, supplement by all means but don't just rely them.
4

Mikey,

17/06/2009 16:02:39
Ye gods, call the polis....

Someone who actually seems to know what they're talking about!

 

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