Home  >  Support and community  >  Support organisations

Support organisations for Hurler syndrome

Around the world there are patient organisations, MPS societies and rare disease networks that understand Hurler syndrome (severe MPS I, MPS I-H). They provide information, peer support, advocacy and, in some cases, financial or practical help. Finding the right organisation in your country can make a huge difference to everyday life and long-term care.

This page highlights the main types of organisations that support people affected by Hurler syndrome and explains how to use the directory of groups listed below.

Important: Inclusion in this directory does not imply endorsement. Services, eligibility and policies vary by country. Always follow advice from your own medical team and local regulations.

How these organisations can help

Most MPS and rare disease organisations aim to:

  • Provide reliable information about Hurler syndrome and related conditions
  • Offer peer and family support, online and in person
  • Help with practical issues such as education, benefits and access to services
  • Advocate for earlier diagnosis, access to treatment and specialist care
  • Support or fund research, including registries, natural history studies and clinical trials
  • Raise awareness among health professionals, policy makers and the public

Families, adults and clinicians can all benefit from connecting with these groups. Support and community

Use filters to narrow by region, focus and audience. Each card includes tags and a “Visit website” button.

Example: National MPS Society (UK)

Condition-specific support for MPS I, including family support, events, information resources and advocacy.

Focus: MPS Region: UK and Ireland Audience: Families

Example: Lysosomal / metabolic network (Europe)

A broader metabolic and lysosomal network supporting multiple conditions and linking families to specialist expertise.

Focus: LSD / metabolic Region: Europe Audience: Families

Example: Rare disease alliance (North America)

Umbrella support on access, rights and policy, with signposting to condition-specific groups and toolkits for families.

Focus: Rare disease Region: North America Audience: Families

Example: International MPS federation

International signposting, educational resources and research support across MPS conditions, including MPS I.

Focus: MPS Region: Global Audience: Professionals

Example: Carer support charity

Support for carers including wellbeing, respite information and guidance on work and benefits.

Focus: Carer / disability Region: UK and Ireland Audience: Families

Example: Children’s hospice / palliative care organisation

Additional support for symptom control, respite and family care when health needs become more complex.

Focus: Palliative Region: Global Audience: Families
No organisations match your filters. Try a different region, focus, audience or search term.

Finding organisations relevant to you

This directory can be filtered in three ways:

  • By focus: Hurler/MPS-specific, LSD/metabolic, rare disease alliances, carer/disability charities, and palliative/hospice organisations
  • By region: UK and Ireland, Europe, North America, Latin America, Middle East and North Africa, Asia-Pacific, and global organisations
  • By audience: families and carers, adults living with Hurler syndrome, and healthcare professionals/researchers

Understanding the types of organisations

MPS societies and condition-specific groups

  • Support from diagnosis onwards, including around HSCT and ERT
  • Condition-specific information about MPS I and Hurler syndrome
  • Helplines, family support workers, conferences and youth events
  • Advocacy for access to specialist centres and treatments

Lysosomal and metabolic networks

  • Cover multiple lysosomal or inherited metabolic conditions
  • Joint education events and conferences across LSDs
  • Useful where there is no standalone MPS group
  • Extra support alongside an MPS society

Rare disease alliances

  • Policy and advocacy on newborn screening and access to care
  • Guidance on rights, entitlements and navigating systems
  • Toolkits for education, work, benefits and stigma
  • Signposting to local and condition-specific groups

Additional layers of support

Alongside condition-specific groups, it is often helpful to connect with:

  • Carer organisations for emotional support, respite information and advice on work and benefits
  • Disability charities and advocacy groups for inclusion, access and legal rights in education, employment and housing
  • Palliative care and hospice organisations for symptom support, respite and end-of-life care when needed

Planning and long-term support needs may change over time. Planning ahead

Making the most of what’s available

For families and adults

  • Start with one or two key organisations recommended by your specialist team
  • Check what each group offers: helpline, information, events, benefits advice, peer groups
  • Decide whether you prefer online, phone or in-person support right now
  • Remember you can join and step back as your needs change
  • Use organisations to help shape questions for clinic, not to replace medical advice

For healthcare professionals

  • Keep a shortlist of trusted organisations to offer families
  • Ask families which groups they already know and how helpful they find them
  • Consider inviting organisations to education days where appropriate
  • Encourage families to use written resources alongside clinic follow-up
  • Be mindful of cultural preferences and different support needs

Things to keep in mind

  • Prefer groups that are transparent about who runs them, how they are funded and how information is produced
  • Look for balanced, evidence-informed content that acknowledges uncertainty and individual differences
  • Be cautious about communities that promote unproven “cures”, advise stopping prescribed treatments without review, or pressure families to share personal data
  • It is OK to ask: “Who writes your information? How is it reviewed? How are decisions made?”

Key points about support organisations

  • Support organisations, MPS societies and rare disease alliances can provide information, peer connection, advocacy and practical help.
  • There are different types of organisations: Hurler/MPS-specific, LSD/metabolic, rare disease umbrella groups, and carer/disability charities.
  • These organisations should complement, not replace, specialist medical care.
  • Choose groups that are reputable, transparent and evidence-informed.
  • Needs change over time, and it is normal to move between different kinds of support.

What to read next

```
Scroll to Top