

Jensen La Vende
Senior Reporter
Despite having a neurological illness that can lead to immobility and death, patients with Multiple Sclerosis (MS) in Trinidad and Tobago are mentally stronger than their counterparts in other countries.
This was one of the findings shared during an MS symposium last Thursday at Amphitheatre C, Eric Williams Medical Sciences Complex. The event featured a team of clinical and non-clinical experts involved in MS care and was held under the theme: “Shaping the Future of Multiple Sclerosis Care in Trinidad & Tobago: A Multisectoral Dialogue.”
Dr Henry Bailey, an economics lecturer at the University of the West Indies, said MS patients in this country have a stronger mental health threshold than those abroad.
“For some reason, as MS patients in Trinidad get older, they report better mental and emotional well-being. This is really weird. Again, this has not been observed anywhere else in any other illness in Trinidad, nor among MS patients internationally.”
Bailey said government needs to rethink how it approaches the procurement of drugs to better meet the needs of patients. He said the cost-benefit for many illnesses should not be measured solely in dollars and cents, but in terms of patient well-being.
Another speaker, Consultant Neurologist Dr Avidesh Panday, said he and his team abandoned the global treatment model for MS because it did not serve their patients well. That approach typically begins with the least effective drug, chosen for having the fewest side effects, and progresses depending on the patient’s response.
“Why wait until you have failed medications to start with the highly effective treatments? It's better you start treatment early and have less disability. So, this is why for those who have been part of the clinics here, you would have seen that in 2018, we changed our approach here. We start using higher effective medications at an earlier date so that you are more functional and you stay better for longer.”
Bailey said he could not confirm whether Panday’s treatment approach was responsible for the stronger mental resilience seen among MS patients.
Panday said it was long overdue for MS care to have its own dedicated clinic. He explained that such a clinic would serve two main purposes: to maintain an accurate national registry of MS patients and to provide more coordinated treatment.
He said more than 95% of MS patients in Trinidad receive care at public health institutions, though many are initially diagnosed in the private sector before being referred into the public system.
“In the past, a lot of patients, sorry, I stand corrected, a fair number of patients sought care abroad. And I can say that the reverse is happening now, where about four to six patients who have Trinidadians, who have left Trinidad to work, may have dual citizenship elsewhere, come back to Trinidad for their treatments. And that is a testament to the evolution and access to care that we have provided here.”
MS patient Gillian Rodulfo spoke about the pain of being misdiagnosed before receiving the correct diagnosis.
She said her first symptoms were numbness in her legs back in 2012. At the time, her doctors told the school bus driver it was due to diesel fumes. She believed this explanation, especially since the problem lessened whenever school was closed — until it didn’t.
Eventually, she was hospitalised. Doctors believed fibroids were pressing against nerve endings, causing the numbness. Surgery was recommended — until she got a second opinion and an MRI led to a proper diagnosis.
“That MRI changed everything. By February 2013, I was admitted to the Seventh-Day Adventist Hospital immediately after the results came in. And I was there for two weeks and let me tell you, those two weeks were some of the hardest days of my life. The day I was admitted, I couldn't feed myself, I couldn't brush my teeth or comb my shoulder-length hair. The hardest part for me was needing to get help to clean myself after I used the toilet,” she said, stifling her cries.
Panday said stories like Rodulfo’s should not be repeated. He said his focus is on educating doctors to better recognise the signs of MS. He credited past education campaigns with speeding up diagnoses, but said treatment needs to be more streamlined so patients don’t have to make multiple trips to public facilities.
“What if we had neurology, urology, mental health, etc., next door to each other, so at the end of your clinic visit, you have everybody. And this is my dream, and the dream of many others. It is not limited to multiple sclerosis, but many other neurological conditions. I hope one day we can do this, have a multidisciplinary team where the MS patient sees neurology, mental health, physical medicine, rehabilitation, medical, social worker, and dietician, all under one roof.”
MS is defined as an inflammatory demyelinating disease of the central nervous system, characterised by ongoing disease activity with profound effects on patient independence and quality of life.