Events and awareness for Hurler syndrome

Events and awareness activities play a crucial role in improving understanding of Hurler syndrome (severe MPS I, MPS I H). They help families feel less isolated, support fundraising for research and services, and educate professionals, schools and the wider public about this rare condition.

This page explains why awareness matters, the types of events you can get involved in, and how to plan safe, respectful activities that genuinely support people living with Hurler syndrome.

Awareness information on this page is general. Dates, campaigns and regulations vary by country. Always check local guidance and work with recognised organisations when planning events.

Turning rare disease into shared understanding

Hurler syndrome is rare. Many people, including health professionals and teachers, may never have heard of it. Awareness and events can:

Awareness is not about pity. It is about recognition, respect and informed action.

Different ways to raise awareness

You can be involved in awareness in ways that fit your energy, time and resources. Examples include:

Awareness and education events

  • Information stands at hospitals, schools, universities or community venues
  • Educational talks or webinars for health professionals, teachers or students
  • Participation in rare disease or MPS information days

Fundraising and community events

  • Sponsored walks, runs, cycles or challenges
  • School non-uniform days or themed days
  • Local events such as coffee mornings, bake sales or quiz nights

Online and social media campaigns

  • Sharing verified information about Hurler syndrome on social channels
  • Joining coordinated campaigns for MPS awareness or rare disease days
  • Creating short videos, blogs or posts about personal experiences (when comfortable)

Families and adults can choose the level of involvement that feels right, from quietly sharing a link to organising a larger event.

Rare disease and MPS awareness days

Many countries recognise:

  • General rare disease awareness events – Often held annually, focusing on all rare diseases. Good opportunities to highlight Hurler syndrome within a broader context.
  • MPS awareness campaigns – Organised by MPS societies or lysosomal storage disorder groups. May include national awareness days, weeks or online campaigns.
You can ask your national MPS society or rare disease organisation:

Which awareness days they observe

Whether they have posters, logos, hashtags or materials for you to use

How you can join existing campaigns rather than creating everything from scratch

Choosing activities that fit your situation

Ideas that many families and adults find manageable:

It is always acceptable to say no. Your health and family needs come first, and awareness can still happen without constant personal exposure.

Running awareness activities in education settings

What schools and colleges can do

  • Include a short, age appropriate session on rare diseases or Hurler syndrome in assemblies or tutor time
  • Plan a non-uniform or themed day to support a chosen MPS or rare disease charity
  • Share information sheets with staff about Hurler syndrome and how it affects learning, mobility, hearing and vision
  • Involve the student and family (where appropriate) in deciding what is shared and how
Good practice
  • Never single out a child without their consent or present them as a lesson or spectacle
  • Focus on respect, inclusion and practical understanding rather than sympathy alone
  • Use verified information from trusted sources and keep medical details at a level the student and family are happy with

Awareness beyond the clinic and classroom

Workplaces, faith communities, sports clubs and community groups can:

Good practice includes:

Asking the person or family affected what they feel comfortable with

Respecting privacy and not sharing personal medical details without explicit consent

Linking awareness to practical changes, such as flexible working, accessibility improvements or inclusive activities

Partnering for accurate and safe messaging

When planning events or campaigns:

This helps ensure that awareness efforts are both emotionally supportive and scientifically sound

Getting the tone right

When raising awareness:

You can remind participants that awareness should support, not exploit, people living with Hurler syndrome.
Checklist Cards

For families and adults

A simple planning checklist

Purpose

Is the main goal awareness, fundraising, education or a mix?

Partners

Can you link with an MPS organisation, hospital, school or workplace?

Audience

Who is this for, and what do they need to know?

Content

Are you using verified information and respecting privacy?

Capacity

What can you realistically manage with your current energy and time?

You can start small. A short classroom talk or social media post can be as valuable as a large public event.

For healthcare professionals

Clinical roles in awareness work

Signpost

Direct families to trusted awareness campaigns and organisations

Review content

Offer to review medical content for patient led events

Participate

Join hospital or community education sessions about Hurler syndrome and MPS I

Support messaging

Encourage balanced messaging that includes both hope and realistic expectations

Protect wellbeing

Support families who may feel pressure to tell their story repeatedly

Awareness work should complement, not compete with, clinical care.

Key points about events and awareness

What to read next

Support and community (overview)

Types of support and how to find it

Support organisations

MPS societies and rare disease charities

Support groups

Peer support and online communities

Practical support

Help with transport, equipment, education and work

Patient and family stories

Real life experiences of Hurler syndrome
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