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About Me

In 2009, I was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (MS). In hope of making sense of such an unpredictable disease, I started attending MS conferences, interviewing healthcare professionals and writing articles as author/co-author for publications such as The BMJ, Nature Reviews Neurology and Neurology.

 

Through my family foundation in Canada, I also began supporting a wide range of MS initiatives including the establishment of the Rachel Horne Prize for Women's Research in MS - an annual award of US$40,000, which recognises a female scientist for her outstanding research into women with MS.

 

I am currently co-chair of the Patient and Public Engagement Group - part of the National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) Policy Research Unit in Dementia and Neurodegeneration based at Queen Mary University of London (QMUL). Since 2022, I have been an Honorary Research Fellow at QMUL.

 

I am currently on Ocrevus, my third disease modifying therapy to treat my MS.

Rachel Horne, founder of the Rachel Horne Prize, with 2024 prize winner, Professor Kirsten Hellwig

With 2024 prize winner Professor Kirsten Hellwig

Non-MS philanthropy

Over the years, I have supported a number of projects which have supported women and girls around the world.

 

These include regular donations to Ethiopiaid Canada and their partner AWSAD, a charity which runs safe houses in Ethiopia for survivors of domestic violence and abuse. I also donate annually to Friends of Ibba Girls' School, a residential girls' school in Southern Sudan.

Rachel Horne at the AWSAD Safe House in Addis Adaba, Ethiopia

At the AWSAD Safe House, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

© 2025 by Rachel Horne

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