Jack Osbourne on his MS diagnosis: I’m feeling good

The 30-year-old son of Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne is “taking care of himself” and “feeling good” as he lives with the neurological condition multiple sclerosis

Jack Osbourne (Copyright: Monica Schipper/Getty)

Jack was told he has the disease which effects 100,000 people in the UK in 2012, just weeks before he became a parent for the first time.

MS attacks the nerve cells in the brain and spine but every sufferer experiences a unique set of symptons and the reality TV star says he’s confident in his treatment plan so for the moment “things are good”.

He told PEOPLE: “I’m doing really well right now, which is awesome, always good news. That’s all I can really ask for at the moment. I’m feeling good, I’m taking care of myself, I’m sticking to my treatment plan, so things are good.”

The Osbourne family (Copyright: Lexi Jones/WENN.com)

Jack didn’t go into detail about how MS has effected him physically and a combination of medications can stave off symptons, however the dilapidating disease is currently incurable and relapses will occur.

People living with MS have been known to slowly go blind, lose the ability to walk or use their limbs and become incontinent.

Jack - who has two daughters, four-year-old Pearl and 16-month-old Andy, with wife Lisa - says the birth of Pearl helped him deal with his diagnosis.

He added: “It’s weird, because I got diagnosed with MS three weeks before my oldest daughter was born. So there was a huge lifestyle change anyway and then you add to it. [My daughter] shifted the focus, which I think is good.”

(Copyright: GETYY/Ari Perilstein)

The ‘Ozzy and Jack’s World Detour’ star has set up a website called 'You Don’t Know Jack About MS’ to help give sufferers and their loved ones “a better understanding” about MS.

Jack explained: “The whole point of 'You Don’t Know Jack About MS’ was to create a destination website for people to go and just learn the broad strokes about MS. What is it, how does it affect people, and cut through a lot of the noise that the internet tends to be full of. Here’s the facts, it’s easy to digest.

"But I don’t want the focus to be on me. I know it’s called that, and I’m hosting it, but I want the focus to be about the disease and kind of giving people a little bit of hope, and a better understanding about what it is.”