As the pivotal Part III of Sit Down Before Reading is being written and finalized, in place of our weekly chapters, we are issuing a series of intriguing challenges to readers. Can you outsmart researchers in multiple sclerosis and Lyme disease? To aid you in this quest, you’ll want to employ moxie and resourcefulness, take advantage of your God-given common sense, and refer to the previously published 22 chapters of SDBR, which contain a trail of ah-ha breadcrumbs if you pay attention to the details.
Researchers have discovered the average age of onset for MS—when people get diagnosed with multiple sclerosis—has been steadily increasing since the 1990s. Why?
https://www.activemsers.org/_files/u...854f5491e1.pdf
Researchers have discovered the average age of onset for MS—when people get diagnosed with multiple sclerosis—has been steadily increasing since the 1990s. Why?
- More sensitive and thorough diagnostics testing
- Neurologists are more aware and knowledgeable of the disease
- Improvements specifically in MRI technology
- The internet age has resulted in better informed, proactive patients
- All of the above
- The age of onset is not significantly increasing
https://www.activemsers.org/_files/u...854f5491e1.pdf