It's not always easy to explain what's changed over the last 6 months — especially in a short appointment. My MS Path helps you reflect, capture what's been happening, and keep it somewhere useful.
Reflect on relapses, symptoms, and daily life in one simple check-in.
Get a patient-friendly summary designed to help you make sense of your answers.
Save each check-in to your account so it’s easier to look back, notice patterns, and stay better prepared.
For you
A clear summary that helps you reflect on what may have changed and keep track of it over time.
For your care team
A structured summary that gives your neurologist or MS nurse a clearer starting point for discussion — helping support more focused conversations and better-informed decisions.
So instead of trying to remember everything in the moment, you already have a clearer picture ready.
My MS Path doesn't just collect your answers. It helps turn them into a clearer, more structured picture that is useful for you and your care team.
So instead of just logging symptoms, you leave with something more useful.
“
I used to struggle to explain what had changed by the time my appointment came around. My MS Path helped me feel more prepared and less like I was trying to remember everything from scratch.
— Person living with MS
By the time an appointment comes around, it can be hard to remember exactly what's been different. My MS Path helps you capture that picture while it's still clear — so you're not relying on memory alone when it matters.
When you arrive with a clearer record of what's been happening, it can help your care team make better use of the appointment too.
One check-in can help you reflect on how you've been recently. Repeating it over time makes it easier to notice patterns, compare one period to another, and show your care team a clearer picture of what's been happening.
Save each check-in to your history
See how things change over time
Stay better prepared for future appointments

This check-in is grounded in validated research designed to help people living with MS notice and understand changes that may suggest worsening over time — making conversations with care teams easier.