Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic inflammatory disorder of the central nervous system often diagnosed in young adults. In the absence of a known cure, a focus of disease management is on maintaining function and quality of life (QOL). There is growing evidence that lifestyle factors may improve quality of life, reduce relapse rate and slow the progression of the disease [1–6]. Modifying lifestyle and health behaviors requires commitment but the potential benefits in MS, as well as a reduced risk of other chronic lifestyle-related diseases, are significant.
There has been a paradigm shift in the management of chronic diseases towards a patient-centered approach to self-management and prevention. People who are proactive in their health may achieve better outcomes than those more passive. Self-efficacy and patient activation have positive associations with healthy lifestyle behaviors, better QOL and functional status, fewer health visits, and decreased depressive symptoms [7–9]. For people with MS (PwMS), increasing self-efficacy predicts improvements in walking ability and physical and psychological impact of MS [10], lower depression scores and better quality of life [11].
A physician-led patient-centered risk modification program, the Overcoming Multiple Sclerosis (OMS) Program, aims to educate PwMS about secondary and tertiary prevention and provide greater autonomy about health care decisions [12, 13]. The 5-day live-in retreat focuses on modifiable lifestyle factors that can be addressed by an individual, ideally with the support of a health professional, empowering participants to take control of their own health. The program content was developed in 1999 from an appraisal of peer-reviewed medical literature on the role of lifestyle factors in MS progression, and is continuously updated to integrate the most recent evidence [3]. The retreat, delivered by medical practitioners with support from trained counsellors, offers an intensive, experiential week, where participants talk about experiences, ask questions, eat the recommended diet, exercise and meditate while forming new friendships.
The OMS program is supported by resources, including a book [3], a website [14] and social media sites including Facebook and Twitter. Each delivers similar content, with differences. The book is detailed with chapter summaries and tables to guide a lay person through the complex information. The website reviews similar content but, along with the social media, is regularly updated with new research. The online platforms encourage participation, contribution to a forum, commentary, sharing of recipes or inspiring stories. The website, established in 2008, has approximately 2,800 visitors per day, two-thirds first time visitors, mostly from North America, with over 11,000 members of the forum.
A longitudinal analysis of the retreats showed clinically and statistically significant improvements in health-related quality of life (HRQOL) compared to baseline (prior to retreat attendance); however, interpretation was limited by the absence of a control group [12, 13]. The Health Outcomes and Lifestyle Intervention in a Sample of People with Multiple Sclerosis study (the HOLISM study [2, 4, 6, 15]) enrolled PwMS from 57 countries via social media platforms, examining the association of lifestyle risk factors with disease outcomes. This cohort of approximately 2,500 people with different types of MS comprises a substantial subset who have previously attended an OMS retreat or accessed other OMS resources, including many not participating in the longitudinal analysis because they attended an OMS retreat in a different location (Coromandel, New Zealand or Perth, Australia) than Victoria, Australia.
This unique dataset provides an opportunity to compare health outcomes of those attending an OMS retreat with those not, and between people engaged in other retreat-linked OMS resources, and those not. The aim of this study was to examine differences in patient-reported outcomes (HRQOL, depression, fatigue) between people attending an OMS retreat and those not. A secondary aim was to explore associations between these outcome measures and engagement with the other retreat-linked OMS resources (book or online content).